Author/Authors :
Hamid, Yaghob Department of Petroleum Engineering - Omidiyeh Branch - Islamic Azad University - Omidiyeh, Iran , Abdideh, Mohammad Department of Petroleum Engineering - Omidiyeh Branch - Islamic Azad University - Omidiyeh, Iran
Abstract :
Cap rocks are dams which can prevent the upward movement of hydrocarbons. They have disparities
and weaknesses including discontinuities, crushed areas, and faults. Gas injection is an effective
mechanism for oil recovery and pore pressure. With increasing pore pressure, normal stress is
reduced, and the integrity of impermeable boundaries (cap rock, fault, etc.) becomes instable. A
successful strategy for reservoir development is the inevitable necessity of conducting geomechanical
studies and modeling the reservoir. The construction of a comprehensive geomechanical model,
including the stress state is a function of depth (direction and amount), physical properties of the
reservoir rock and its formations (rock resistance and elastic moduli), pore pressure estimation, and
description and distribution of fractures and faults. In this work, analytical and numerical methods
have been used in geomechanical modeling, and the data used for modeling and petrophysical
information are downhole tests. The geomechanical modeling of gas injection into the reservoir and,
simultaneously, the operation of Asmari reservoir and Marun oilfield cap rock in the southwest of
Iran were carried out. The threshold of reactivating faults and the critical pressure of induced fracture
were calculated, and the results were presented as analytical and numerical models. Moreover, in
addition to analyzing the stress field at depths, the resistance parameters of the formations were
determined. The results showed that the most changes and instabilities were around the wellheads,
fractures, and the edges of the field.
Keywords :
Numerical Modeling , Geomechanical Model , Elastic Rock Properties , Pore Pressure , Gas Injection , Discontinuity , Cap Rock