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AAPG Bulletin, Vol. 90 (2006), Program Abstracts (Digital)

7th Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition
Manama, Bahrain
March 27-29, 2006

ABSTRACT: In-situ Previous HitWaterNext Hit Salinity and Saturation Previous HitDeterminationNext Hit from Simultaneous Logs

Roger J. Griffiths
Middle East, Schlumberger, P.O. Box 21, Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates, phone: +971 50 6681831, [email protected]

With secondary and tertiary recovery becoming increasingly common, the problem of assessing formation saturation becomes more complex as injected fluids mix with the original waters resulting in variations in the Previous HitwaterNext Hit salinity (and hence Previous HitwaterNext Hit Previous HitresistivityNext Hit, Rw) across a field. By deriving two independent Previous HitwaterNext Hit saturations from measurements with differing sensitivities to formation Previous HitwaterNext Hit salinity we demonstrate how the Previous HitwaterNext Hit salinity and saturation can be determined simultaneously.

The recent introduction of a Logging_While-Drilling (LWD) Thermal Capture Cross-Section (Sigma) measurement acquired very close to the Previous HitresistivityNext Hit measure point on the LWD tool has opened the possibility of comparing the open-hole preinvasion Sigma-derived saturation with that from a traditional open-hole Archie-derived saturation. As both are acquired at close to the same depth at the same time, the saturations should match if the assigned Previous HitwaterNext Hit salinity (and hence Previous HitwaterNext Hit Previous HitresistivityNext Hit and Previous HitwaterNext Hit sigma value) is correct. As the Sigma and Previous HitresistivityNext Hit measurements differ in their response to changing Previous HitwaterNext Hit salinity, any discrepancy between the two saturations can be used to determine simultaneously both the in-situ Previous HitwaterNext Hit salinity and the actual formation Previous HitwaterNext Hit saturation by varying the Previous HitwaterNext Hit salinity until a Previous HitwaterTop saturation match is achieved. We review field examples showing the application of this technique to Middle East carbonate reservoirs.

 

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