Title of article :
Equivalent pore radius and velocity of elastic waves in shale. Skjold Flank-1 Well, Danish North Sea
Author/Authors :
Jean-Jacque Eama Mbia، نويسنده , , Ernest N. and Fabricius، نويسنده , , Ida L. and Oji، نويسنده , , Collins O.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
11
From page :
280
To page :
290
Abstract :
Equivalent pore radius links permeability and porosity of a porous medium. This property can be calculated from specific surface and porosity data measured in the laboratory. We can obtain porosity information from logging data but specific surface information can only be obtained from laboratory experiments on cuttings or core samples. In this study we demonstrate that elastic moduli as calculated from bulk density and velocity of elastic waves relate to equivalent pore radius of the studied shale intervals. This relationship establishes the possibility of calculating equivalent pore radius from logging data. d cuttings samples and available well logs to characterize Cenozoic, Cretaceous and Jurassic shale sections in the Skjold Flank-1 well of Danish North Sea. Logging data and well reports were used to select 31 shale cuttings samples and experimental data for porosity, grain density and BET specific surface were obtained from these samples using kaolinite and smectite as reference. The cuttings samples were also characterized with respect to mineralogical composition, content of organic carbon and cation exchange capacity. lent pore radius was calculated from porosity and BET data. It varies from 5 nm for some Cretacous and Jurassic shale samples to about 25 nm in some Cenozoic samples. Pore radius is controlled by shale mineralogy and the degree of compaction. nd exponential relationships between equivalent pore radius and elastic moduli, and these empirical relationships were used to calculate equivalent pore radius for the Cenozoic, Cretaceous and Jurassic shale sections in Skjold Flank-1 well from elastic moduli. Elastic moduli were calculated from sonic velocity and density logs. The calculated equivalent pore radius logs vary from 27 nm at 500 m to 13 nm at 2000 m within Cenozoic shale and from 12 nm to about 6 nm in the deeper Cretaceous and Jurassic shale intervals. Cross plots of the equivalent pore radius with neutron porosity and gamma ray data separate the Cenozoic shale section with high equivalent pore radius from Cretaceous and Jurassic sections.
Keywords :
Carbon Capture and Storage , formation evaluation/logging , Rock properties , Reservoir simulation/numerical modeling , geological modeling
Journal title :
Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering
Record number :
2216296
Link To Document :
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