Difference between revisions of "Postaccumulation cementation"

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* [[Changes in trapping geometry]]
 
* [[Changes in trapping geometry]]
 
* [[Hydrodynamics: change in configuration]]
 
* [[Hydrodynamics: change in configuration]]
* [[Consequences of spillage]]
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 17:55, 23 December 2014

Exploring for Oil and Gas Traps
Series Treatise in Petroleum Geology
Part Predicting the occurrence of oil and gas traps
Chapter Predicting preservation and destruction of accumulations
Author Alton A. Brown
Link Web page
Store AAPG Store

Although the presence of a petroleum phase may retard diagenesis in an accumulation, sooner or later reservoir quality decreases with increasing age and burial.[1]

The process

As the pore volume within a trap decreases due to burial cementation, several phenomena combine to destroy the economic accumulation.

  1. Petroleum is displaced from the trap at the spill point as the pore volume within the structural closure decreases. If porosity is lowered sufficiently, the accumulation may be subeconomic in size.
  2. Reduced porosity may result in lower permeability so that production rates are subeconomic, even where economic quantities of petroleum are still trapped.
  3. As pore size decreases in a petroleum-filled reservoir, the capillary pressure of the petroleum phase must increase to occupy the pore spaces (assuming no change in wettability). In low-permeability tight sands or carbonates, the capillary displacement pressure in the reservoir rock may approach that of moderate-quality seals. As a result, a lithology that could seal an accumulation at shallow depth may no longer be effective at deeper depths because it differs little from the reservoir rock.

Predicting spillage by cementation

Reduced porosity can be predicted from empirical or statistical evaluation of porosity data for reservoir intervals with similar composition and burial history as the prospect.[2][1] In general, porosity decreases with increasing age, depth, and temperature. Numerical modeling techniques are not yet refined enough to quantitatively predict prospect reservoir quality loss.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Bloch, S., 1991, Empirical prediction of porosity and permeability in sandstones: AAPG Bulletin, vol. 75, p. 1145–1160.
  2. Schmoker, J., W., Gautier, D., L., 1988, Sandstone porosity as a function of thermal maturity: Geology, vol. 16, p. 1007–1010, DOI: 10.1130/0091-7613(1988)016<1007:SPAAFO>2.3.CO;2.

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