Using The Other End of the Capillary Pressure
Curve - Discriminating Permeability Based
Rock
Types With Well Logs When the
Permeability Mechanism is Related to Displacement Pressure and not Porosity
By
Yousef Al Shobaili1, Edward A. Clerke1
(1) Saudi Aramco, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
A large Lower Cretaceous age carbonate reservoir in Saudi Arabia contains
reservoir rocks with permeabilities that vary from 0.2 to 2000 md.
Characterization efforts to model the reservoir proceed from the very important
highest permeability
rock
types that dominate well and inflow behavior to the
lower
quality
storage and dispersed delivery
rock
types.
Investigations of capillary pressure data suggested three petrophysical
rock
types (PRT’s), one petrophysical
rock
type with permeability related to porosity
and two PRT’s with permeability unrelated to porosity but strongly related to
the systematic decrease of the entry or displacement pressure, Pd, or the
increase in the largest pore throats.
Well logs that are sensitive to porosity are well known and recognized. Our
reservoir, however, needed to use well log responses related to the Pd
(displacement pressure) end of the capillary pressure curve. This
rock
property
is usually assessed with invasion related well log responses. A range of
potential well log candidates were investigated, robust discrimination of order
of magnitude changes in permeability caused by increases in large pore throat
sizes were successfully discriminated by the judicious use of the combination of
porosity, SP and sonic well logs.