화학공학소재연구정보센터
Energy Sources, Vol.22, No.6, 515-524, 2000
Computer modeling of porosity and lithology for complex reservoirs using well-log measurements
The high degree of heterogeneity, saturation of multiphase fluids, and presence of clays in complex reservoirs make each of the three porosity logs (sonic, density, and neutron), if used independently, generally record inaccurate porosity. For such reservoirs, combining different logs gives accurate results of porosity. The reservoirs of Terra Nova and Hibernia (Jeanne d'Arc Basin), offshore of the eastern coast of Canada, are saturated with multiphase fluids, enriched with clays, and made of compacted and heterogeneous rocks, in terms of the lithological and mineralogical composition and the size and shape of the grains and pores, In this study, the porosity and the rock constituents were determined for both reservoirs using a computer technique in which the it ration process was applied. That was done by developing and using various computer programs and models; and utilizing numerous data from several logs analyzed at 0.2-m sampling-depth intervals The more the number of logs and iterations used in computation, the higher the degree of accuracy of results obtained. The reservoirs are made of shalestone, sandstone, siltstone, limestone, marlstone, and conglomerate. The porosity varies widely, because of variations in the rock composition and overburden pressure. The modeled porosity was compared to the porosity measured by the compensated neutron log (CNL). The results indicate that the CNL-measured porosity is generally higher than the modeled porosity by about 50%. The CNL-measurements are greatly affected by the high amount of hydrogen that is chemically bound in the shales, hydrocarbons, and water. Therefore, CNL records higher values of porosity when porosity is actually low, and lower values of porosity when it is actually high.