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  4. Effective flow properties of heterolithic, cross-bedded tidal sandstones: Part 2. Flow simulation
 
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Effective flow properties of heterolithic, cross-bedded tidal sandstones: Part 2. Flow simulation
File(s)
Massart-et-al-2016b.pdf (2.65 MB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Massart, BYG
Jackson, MD
Hampson, GJ
Johnson, HD
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Tidal heterolithic sandstone reservoirs are heterogeneous at the sub-meter scale, due to the ubiquitous presence of intercalated sandstone and mudstone laminae. Core-plug permeability measurements fail to sample a representative volume of this heterogeneity. Here we investigate the impact of mudstone drape distribution on the effective permeability of heterolithic, cross-bedded tidal sandstones using three-dimensional (3D) surface-based “mini-models” that capture the geometry of cross-beds at an appropriate scale. The impact of seven geometric parameters has been determined: (1) mudstone fraction, (2) sandstone laminae thickness, (3) mudstone drape continuity, (4) toeset dip, (5) climb angle of foreset-toeset surfaces, (6) proportion of foresets to toesets, and (7) trough or tabular geometry of the cross-beds.
We begin by identifying a representative elementary volume (REV) of 1 m3, confirming that the model volume of 9 m3 yields representative permeability values. Effective permeability decreases as the mudstone fraction increases, and is highly anisotropic: vertical permeability falls to c. 0.5% of the sandstone permeability at a mudstone fraction of 25%, while the horizontal permeability falls to c. 5% and c. 50% of the sandstone value in the dip (across mudstone drapes) and strike (parallel to mudstone drapes) directions, respectively. There is considerable spread around these values, because each parameter investigated can significantly impact effective permeability, with the impact depending upon the flow direction and mudstone fraction. The results yield improved estimates of effective permeability in heterolithic, cross-bedded sandstones, which can be used to populate reservoir-scale model grid blocks using estimates of mudstone fraction and geometrical parameters obtained from core and outcrop-analog data.
Date Issued
2016-02-12
Date Acceptance
2016-02-04
Citation
AAPG Bulletin, 2016, 100 (5), pp.723-742
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/30275
DOI
https://www.dx.doi.org/10.1306/02011614222
ISSN
0149-1423
Publisher
The American Association of Petroleum Geologists
Start Page
723
End Page
742
Journal / Book Title
AAPG Bulletin
Volume
100
Issue
5
Copyright Statement
© 2016. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.
Sponsor
A/S Norske Shell
Grant Number
4510933069
Subjects
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Geology
FLUID-FLOW
RESERVOIR
PERMEABILITY
MODELS
Energy
0403 Geology
0914 Resources Engineering And Extractive Metallurgy
Publication Status
Published
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