Abstract: How
to Turn the Geological Image of a Fractured Reservoir
into a Dual-Porosity
Model
CACAS, M.C., S. SARDA, B. BOURBIAUX, and J.C.SABATHIER
Both characterization
and simulation of naturally fractured reservoirs benefited from major advances
in the recent years. On the one hand, techniques of data integration and
3D imaging are available to build representative geologic images of fracture
networks. On the other hand, multi-purpose dual-porosity simulators have
been developed to deal with any scenario of reservoir
exploitation. However,
the "sugar lump" representation of the fractured medium used in these simulators
is actually very far from geologic images. Hence, the
reservoir
engineer
remains faced with the difficulty of parameterizing the dual-porosity model,
and particularly of finding correct input data for equivalent fracture
permeabilities, and equivalent matrix block dimensions.
New and systematic methodology and software have been developed to compute those equivalent hydraulic parameters:
1. A tensor of equivalent fracture permeability is derived from 3D flow computations in the actual fracture network using a resistor network method;
2. The equivalent block dimensions in each layer are derived from the identification of a geometrical function based on capillary imbibition.
They have been validated on
simple fracture networks from reference fine-grid simulations
with a conventional
reservoir
simulator. Their efficiency to process actual complex geological
image is also demonstrated..
With such a methodology and
linking software, the reservoir
engineer can build a representative dual-porosity
model from the geologic images resulting from
field
fracturing data information.
This optimal use of geological data will improve the reliability of dual-porosity
reservoir
production forecasts.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90942©1997 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Vienna, Austria