Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5484154 Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 2017 45 Pages PDF
Abstract
In carbonate reservoir rocks the complex interaction between the petrophysical properties corresponds to the various depositional microstructures which are modified by various diagenetic processes that ultimately define the reservoir quality, and pose challenges to the prediction of permeability. The permeability heterogeneity in the carbonate oil reservoirs of northern Iraq varies widely and is thought to be controlled by a number of different factors. In this work, controls of matrix permeability for the Cretaceous Kometan formation selected from five oil fields in Kirkuk embayment zone have been investigated. Helium porosity, helium pulse decay permeability, brine permeability, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR), Mercury Injection Capillary pressure (MICP), Scanning Electronic Microscopy (SEM), X-Ray diffraction (XRD), and photomicrography of thin section have been used to investigate the effect of microstructure on the variation of permeability in the Kometan Formation. The formation has porosities and permeabilities which range from 0.5 ± 0.5% to 29 ± 0.5% and from 0.65 ± 0.08 μD to 700 ± 0.08 μD respectively. Three types of pore systems have been investigated using pore type, pore size and pore-throat size as characterizing parameters. We have recognized three microstructural types: (i) matrix composed of nano-intercrystalline pores (pore diameter dp smaller than 1 μm and a nanoporous pore-throat size), (ii) matrix composed of micro-intercrystalline pores (1 10 μm) also with microporous pore-throat radii. The nano-intercrystalline pore system is common across northern Iraq and represents the effective pore system type in the reservoirs of the Kirkuk embayment zone. For these tight carbonate reservoirs, the mineralogy, especially of quartz and clay minerals (illite and smectite), has little relationship with the measured Klinkenberg-corrected permeability. Consequently, mineralogy is not a useful controlling factor for permeability. Diagenetic processes have altered the depositional texture significantly, resulting in changes to the pore size and pore-throat size distribution and affecting the permeability. In addition the matrix permeability is sensitive to stress, with permeability decreases between −4 × 10−4 mD/psi and −4 × 10−5 mD/psi in the effective stress range from 0 psi to 4000 psi. It has been found that of the three microstructure pore types the nano-intercrystalline pore system is more sensitive to increasing effective stress compared to the micro-intercrystalline and meso-intragranular pore systems. Laboratory experiments have shown that stylolisation resulting from regional fluid movements has also affected matrix permeability, with the stylolites acting as barriers to fluid flow and considered to be an important source of tightness of the Kometan formation in the Kirkuk embayment fields.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Economic Geology
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