ABSTRACT: Integration of NMR, borehole
image, and conventional log data for improved
petrophysical characterization of thinly bedded reservoir sequences
Shorey, David S., Gary Ostroff, Rocco Difoggio, and Daniel Georgi, Baker Atlas, Houston, TX
Across thinly bedded sand-shale sequences, such as deep-water turbidities, where the
bed thickness is less than that of the logging tool vertical resolution, reservoir
properties of the individual laminations cannot be resolved. Consequently, the measured
bulk response across these sequences reflects the partial volume-weighted average of the
sand and shale properties over the logging tool's vertical resolution. This results in
apparent low bulk porosity and resistivity measurements; low computed permeability; and
high computed water saturation. In the absence of shale distribution information, the bulk
response is often assumed to reflect the actual reservoir properties. Although this may be
true in the case of dispersed shale, in laminated sequences the actual sand lamination
reservoir properties are progressively masked by reductions in sand net to gross. The
implications to reservoir description in the later case are to dramatically under estimate
the reservoir quality, productivity, hydrocarbon storage capacity, and to frequently
bypass productive intervals. Through the integration of NMR porosity data, borehole
images
and conventional logs, shale distribution can be characterized and laminar shale volume
quantified over the logging tool's vertical resolution. If the shale properties can be
resolved across a bed whose thickness is at or above the tool resolution, the laminar
shale contribution can be removed from the bulk tool measurement providing a solution for
the average reservoir sand properties.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90913©2000 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Bali, Indonesia