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Controls On The Variability Of
Fluid
Properties
Of Heavy Oils And Bitumens In
Foreland Basins: A Case History From The Albertan Oil Sands*
By
Jennifer Adams1, Barry Bennett1, Haiping Huang1, Tamer Koksalan1, Dennis Jiang1, Mathew Fay1, Ian Gates1, and Steve Larter1
Search and Discovery Article #40275
Posted March 10, 2008
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for AAPG Hedberg Conference, “Heavy Oil and Bitumen in Foreland Basins – From Processes to Products,” September 30 - October 3, 2007 – Banff, Alberta, Canada
1
Petroleum
Reservoir
Group and Alberta Ingenuity Centre of Insitu Energy, University of
Calgary, Calgary, Alberta
The world oil inventory is
dominated by heavy oils and tar sand (HOTS) bitumens in foreland basins,
generated almost entirely by the process of biodegradation. This process is a
biologically driven, complex reactive diffusion-dominated, in-
reservoir
oil
alteration process that occurs under anaerobic conditions (Aitken et al., 2004).
It is driven by oil-water reactions, usually at the base of the oil column,
producing methane and CO2 as by-products and concentrating heavy oil
components (Head et al., 2003). In any
reservoir
with a water leg and without
having been pasteurized, large volumes of lighter hydrocarbon components are
consumed by microbial metabolism at the oil-water contact (OWC) or transition
zone, and this commonly results in significant vertical and lateral gradients in
oil composition and thus oil viscosity (Larter et al., 2003, 2006a,b). The
controls on progressive oil alteration and associated viscosity increase are
related to the oil-charge composition and charge-rate history (Adams et al.,
2006), mixing of fresh and biodegraded oils and diffusion of oil components
(Koopmans et al., 2002), the extent of the water leg in the
reservoir
and
nutrient supply, and the
reservoir
temperature history (Larter et al., 2003;
2006a). Temperature ultimately controls the rate of metabolism (decreases with
increasing temperature) and survival of micro-organisms in the subsurface with
reservoir
pasteurization at temperatures of 80°C
and greater (Wilhelms et al., 2001).
As a
petroleum
system evolves
and biodegradation progresses, the complex interplay of these mass transport and
biological processes leads to large spatial variation in
fluid
properties
commonly seen across basins and at field and
reservoir
scales. The defining
characteristic of heavy and super-heavy oilfields is the significant
heterogeneities in
fluid
properties
. For instance, viscosity can increase with
depth by up to one hundred times across a 40-m thick
reservoir
(Figure 1c; Larter et al., 2006). Viscosity variations can often dominate the distribution
of the oil phase mobility ratio (oil effective permeability:oil viscosity),
which in turn controls production behavior under primary and thermal recovery.
Surprisingly, traditional heavy oil and tar sand exploration and production
strategies rely significantly on characterization of key
reservoir
heterogeneities and assessments of
fluid
saturations, but in most
reservoir
simulations and operation design,
fluid
properties
are assumed constant! An
ability to accurately predict the
petroleum
biodegradation levels, and thus
pre-drill
fluid
properties
, facilitates targeting of the most economic prospects
for future development. Also, detailed spatial characterization of oil
variability is crucial to developing recovery strategies, well placement, and
production schedules to optimize recovery and minimize downstream costs.
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Lower Cretaceous Reservoirs, Alberta Basin
Thermal history
of a
Numerical
charge-degrade models for tar sand reservoirs along section A-A’
show that continuous long-term charge into these reservoirs and
continued degradation until present day best explain the observed
oil quality and volumes in the tar sands (Figures 2b-d), rather than
instantaneous charge of oil (Figure 2a; Adams et al., 2006).
Furthermore, the thermal history of the Variations in biodegradation levels within fields are sometimes related to the transport and dissolution of mineral-buffered essential nutrients to the micro-organisms active at the OWC, which may limit the rate of biodegradation (Rogers et al., 1998; Larter et al., 2006). For example, some of the Gething reservoired oil has low Pristane/nC17 and Phytane/nC18 ratios, suggesting very slight degradation whereas the other nearby (within 2 to 3 km) Gething oils are slightly to moderately degraded and show loss of n-alkanes. The more degraded oils are underlain by at least a 1-m-thick waterleg or are laterally within 800 m of free water which fueled degradation by providing the necessary nutrients to the micro-organisms, while degradation in the slightly degraded oil columns was curtailed when these reservoirs were filled to the underseal.
There is
interplay over geological timescales of oil charge history (oil
residence time) and thermal and nutrient controls on degradation
rates, along with local-scale mass transport dynamics of oil column
mixing, via advective charge, biogenic gas generation, and diffusion
of reactive hydrocarbons to the OWC field,
On field scales,
significant lateral variations in viscosity of up to an order of
magnitude have also been observed from networks of vertical
delineation wells over 2 to 5 km distances. Viscosity variations may
exhibit areal patterns; for example, lower viscosity “fingers” are
often embedded between higher viscosity “islands” though the
transitions are typically smooth and wavelike unless faulting is
involved (Adams, 2007). Typically, lateral oil viscosity variations
occur smoothly by factors of 2 to 10 times on a length scale of
500-1000 m laterally. Interaction of charging and degradation
processes are continuous, forming graded transitions between the
relatively high and low viscosity regions rather than distinct oil
viscosity domains. The combination of intersecting viscous
Adams, J.J., Gates, I.D., and Larter, S., 2007, The impact of oil viscosity heterogeneity on production characteristics of tar sand and heavy oil reservoirs. Part II: Intelligent, geotailored recovery processes in compositionally graded reservoirs: CHOA Slugging It Out Meeting. Adams, J.J., Fowler, M., Riediger, C. and Larter, S.R., 2006, The Canadian tar sands are limited by deep burial sterilization: Journal Geochemical Exploration, v. 89, no. 1-3, p. 1-4. Aitken,C.M., Jones, D.M., and Larter, S.R.,2004, Anaerobic hydrocarbon biodegradation in deep subsurface oil reservoirs: Nature, v. 431, p. 291-294. Bennett, B., and Larter, S.R.,2000, Quantitative separation of aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons using silver ion-silica solid-phase extraction: Analytical Chemistry, v. 72, no. 5, p. 1039-1044. Brooks, P.W., Fowler, M.G., and MacQueen, R.W.,1990, Biomarker geochemistry of Cretaceous oil sands/heavy oils and Paleozoic carbonate trend bitumens, Western Canada Basin: Fourth UNITAR/UNDP Conference on Heavy Crude and Tar Sands, Edmonton, AB, p. 593-606. Head, I.M., Jones, D.M., and Larter, S.R.,2003, Biological activity in the deep subsurface and the origin of heavy oil. Nature, v. 426, p. 344-352. Huang H.P., Bowler B.F.J., Oldenburg T.B.P., and Larter S.R.,2004, The effect of biodegradation on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in reservoired oils from the Liaohe basin, NE China: Organic Geochemistry, v. 35, no. 11-12, p. 1619-1634. Koopmans MP, Larter S.R, Zhang, C.M., et al.,2002, Biodegradation and mixing of crude oils in Eocene Es3 reservoirs of the Liaohe basin, northeastern China: AAPG Bulletin, v. 86, no. 10, p. 1833-1843.
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Aplin, A., Di Primio, R., Zwach, C., Erdmann, M., and Telnaes, N.,
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Bennett, B.,2006a, CIPC origin and impact of
Larter, S., Huang, H., Adams, J., Bennett, B.,
Jokanola, O., Oldenburg, T., Jones, M., Head, I., Riediger, C., and
Fowler, M., 2006b, The controls on the composition of biodegraded
oils in the deep subsurface: Part II - Geological controls on
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