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  • 1
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    London : The Geological Society
    Associated volumes
    Call number: 9/M 07.0421(347)
    In: Geological Society special publication
    Description / Table of Contents: Reservoir compartmentalization the segregation of a petroleum accumulation into a number of individual fluid/pressure compartments controls the volume of moveable oil or gas that might be connected to any given well drilled in a field, and consequently impacts booking of reserves and operational profitability. This is a general feature of modern exploration and production portfolios, and has driven major developments in geoscience, engineering and related technology. Given that compartmentalization is a consequence of many factors, an integrated subsurface approach is required to better understand and predict compartmentalization behaviour, and to minimize the risk of it occurring unexpectedly. This volume reviews our current understanding and ability to model compartmentalization. It highlights the necessity for effective specialist discipline integration, and the value of learning from operational experience in: detection and monitoring of compartmentalization; stratigraphic and mixed-mode compartmentalization; and fault-dominated compartmentalization.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VI, 362 S. : farb. Ill., graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9781862393165
    Series Statement: Geological Society special publication 347
    Classification:
    Deposits
    Location: Reading room
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
    Description / Table of Contents: Reservoir compartmentalization - the segregation of a petroleum accumulation into a number of individual fluid/pressure compartments - controls the volume of moveable oil or gas that might be connected to any given well drilled in a field, and consequently impacts ‘booking’ of reserves and operational profitability. This is a general feature of modern exploration and production portfolios, and has driven major developments in geoscience, engineering and related technology. Given that compartmentalization is a consequence of many factors, an integrated subsurface approach is required to better understand and predict compartmentalization behaviour, and to minimize the risk of it occurring unexpectedly. This volume reviews our current understanding and ability to model compartmentalization. It highlights the necessity for effective specialist discipline integration, and the value of learning from operational experience in: detection and monitoring of compartmentalization; stratigraphic and mixed-mode compartmentalization; and fault-dominated compartmentalization.
    Pages: Online-Ressource (VI, 362 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9781863293165
    Language: English
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  • 3
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 292: 1-24.
    Publication Date: 2008-01-02
    Description: Structurally complex reservoirs form a distinct class of reservoir, in which fault arrays and fracture networks, in particular, exert an over-riding control on petroleum trapping and production behaviour. With modern exploration and production portfolios commonly held in geologically complex settings, there is an increasing technical challenge to find new prospects and to extract remaining hydrocarbons from these more structurally complex reservoirs. Improved analytical and modelling techniques will enhance our ability to locate connected hydrocarbon volumes and unswept sections of reservoir, and thus help optimize field development, production rates and ultimate recovery. This volume reviews our current understanding and ability to model the complex distribution and behaviour of fault and fracture networks, highlighting their fluid compartmentalizing effects and storage-transmissivity characteristics, and outlining approaches for predicting the dynamic fluid flow and geomechanical behaviour of structurally complex reservoirs. This introductory paper provides an overview of the research status on structurally complex reservoirs and aims to create a context for the collection of papers presented in this volume and, in doing so, an entry point for the reader into the subject. We have focused on the recent progress and outstanding issues in the areas of: (i) structural complexity and fault geometry; (ii) the detection and prediction of faults and fractures; (iii) the compartmentalizing effects of fault systems and complex siliciclastic reservoirs; and (iv) the critical controls that affect fractured reservoirs.
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  • 4
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 292: 219-233.
    Publication Date: 2008-01-02
    Description: This paper describes basic rules-of-thumb' that offer an indication of common uncertainties and pitfalls, as well as the analytical methods, data requirements and work elements required to replicate the impact of faults on fluid flow in production simulation models successfully. The first, and most important, stage in this modelling process is to ensure that an accurate structural interpretation is incorporated into the simulation model. In particular, that all fault linkages and cross-fault juxtapositions are taken from the seismic interpretation into the simulation grid. Fault rocks sometimes reduce the rate of cross-fault flow in which case it is important to account for this reduction in flow within simulation models. This is best achieved if databases of fault rock properties, measured from the field of interest or nearby similar reservoirs, are up-scaled to calculate fault transmissibility multipliers. It is sometimes necessary to consider not just the single-phase permeability but also the capillary pressure and relative permeability characteristics of the fault rocks present. Finally, all the relevant static and dynamic data must be appraised critically. However, the interpretation of such data is usually non-unique and misinterpretations can create errors in the production-related fault seal analysis. Where these basic guidelines are followed, it has been our experience that the project time required to achieve a history match of production data is dramatically reduced. In addition, as the history match is more geologically reasonable, the model is often more reliable for predicting the long-term behaviour of the reservoir. This gives confidence in the model's forecast to guide development planning and day-to-day field management decisions.
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  • 5
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 347: 1-8.
    Publication Date: 2010-11-08
    Description: Reservoir Compartmentalization - the segregation of a petroleum accumulation into a number of individual fluid/pressure compartments - occurs when flow is prevented across ‘sealed’ boundaries in the reservoir. These boundaries are caused by a variety of geological and fluid dynamic factors, but there are two basic types: ‘static seals’ that are completely sealed and capable of withholding (trapping) petroleum columns over geological time; and ‘dynamic seals’ that are low to very low permeability flow baffles that reduce petroleum cross-flow to infinitesimally slow rates. The latter allow fluids and pressures to equilibrate across a boundary over geological time-scales, but act as seals over production time-scales, because they prevent cross-flow at normal production rates - such that fluid contacts, saturations and pressures progressively segregate into ‘dynamic’ compartments. Thus, reservoir compartmentalization impacts the volume of moveable (produceable) oil or gas that might be connected to any given well drilled in a field, which restricts the volume of reserves that can be ‘booked’ for that field. Booking of reserves is tightly regulated by government authorities because it is a key measure used by stock analysts and investors to value an oil company. This places reservoir compartmentalization studies, and the predictive science and technology applied to them, at the heart of company valuation. Unexpected compartmentalization can also seriously impact the profitability of a field: with more data acquisition, more study, more wells, more time being required to produce less oil and gas than was originally anticipated. In extreme cases, this might even lead to early...
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: This paper examines progressive evolution of fault architectures through late orogenic compression- to post-orogenic extensional deformation in the Witwatersrand Basin, South Africa. The results indicate that rapid extrusion of mafic lavas of the lower Klipriviersberg Group formed a rigid lid' over the thrust front, changing its mechanical character and thereby driving a change of structural style from fold growth to passive roof duplex. Flexural tightening of folds in the core of the triangle zones at this time may have helped provide the dynamic permeability for distributed ingress of hydrothermal fluids and consequent gold mineralization. Shortly afterwards, the kinematic environment changed to become extensional. However, this study shows sharp lateral partitioning of the duration of kinematic style and structural amplification, such that thrusting and extension coexisted along strike in the upper Klipriviersberg Group. Thus the switch from thrusting to extension was progressive within the region, but locally very rapid. As the local kinematic environment became extensional, the fault system evolved progressively, with the early stages of kinematic changes being dominated by a process of reactivation by architectural scavenging, in which new extensional structures developed by selectively reusing and incorporating geometrical segments of earlier formed thrust and normal faults. Three basic stages can be identified in this evolution: broad extension above underlying detachments, involving reactivation of lateral structures; a period of intensive reactivation and kinematic reworking incorporating frontal structures; and an abandonment stage when the detailed influence of the earlier architecture diminished and the fault system developed larger through-going normal faults. The interaction of the newly developing fault system with the pre-existing architecture constitutes pre-programming of the final geometry, in which individual large faults are composed of a reticulated network of new and inherited segments. The observations are consistent with fault scale being a key control on the fault reactivation involved. This study has involved full integration of a dataset comprising 2D and 3D seismic reflection data, geological mine plans, logging of over 120 km of drill core and underground mapping in deep mine workings that pass 3 km into the seismic volume at 23 km depth.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2010-11-08
    Description: The Pierce Field in the Central UK North Sea is a twin diapir structure that produces from the Paleocene Forties Sandstone Member (Forties Sandstone). Different hydrocarbon-water contacts encountered in the wells around both diapirs have been variously ascribed to a hydrodynamically tilted oil-water contact or else some form of stepped (compartmentalized) contact. Recent reinterpretation of the structure, sedimentology and fluid geochemistry has indicated that the stratigraphic architecture of the reservoir is the prime control on fluid flow over both geological and production time-scales. These depositional architectures deflect the hydrodynamic flow of aquifer water around the field, resulting in a modified-tilted-contact. The same depositional architectures control the flow of fluids under production. The Forties Sandstone was emplaced by turbidity flows influenced by pre-existing seafloor topography that funneled the flows into discrete sediment corridors and into the Pierce area. The rising twin diapirs further influenced the flows by forming: (a) a small salt withdrawal basin between the diapirs that captured sediment; and (b) enough seafloor topography to prevent the bulk of the flows from depositing significant amounts of sand over the crest of the diapirs. Because the bulk of the high permeability sands were deposited in a rim around the diapirs, the aquifer and injected water does not always flow to structurally higher elevations, but follows the geometry of the channelized sands. While faults are present on both South and North Pierce, they are not extensive and do not appear to play a major role in the compartmentalization of the field. From production data, pressure communication can be inferred around North Pierce and around the majority of South Pierce, the main exception being a block bound by large throw faults in the SE of the southern diapir. Geochemical fingerprinting of the hydrocarbons in Pierce shows families of oils that suggest that the northern and southern parts of the reservoir are separate oil compartments, which is a result of the interaction of the filling history and the stratigraphic and structural architecture of the reservoir.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2010-11-08
    Description: This paper describes the nature and relative significance of stratigraphic and structural compartmentalization in dryland fluvial reservoirs using data drawn from the Heron Cluster (Heron, Egret and Skua) oil fields in the UK Central North Sea. The Triassic Skagerrak Formation reservoir in these fields was deposited in a variety of dryland terminal fluvial settings, ranging from relatively arid terminal splay and playa to more vegetated, channel-confined systems with associated floodplain and palustrine facies. Laterally extensive floodbasin shales punctuate this terminal fluvial architecture. Static and dynamic data indicate that these fields are compartmentalized: geochemical data indicate significant fluid variations both between wells and vertically within individual wells; material balance calculations suggest production from restricted connected volumes, locally from a subset of the range of oils present; and re-perforation across significant shale boundaries access undepleted reservoir with different fluid compositions. Lateral variations could be ascribed to prominent structuration within these fields, but in general these high net:gross reservoirs do not have a viable fault seal mechanism. Early (syn-halokinetic) grounding of Triassic pods' between salt swells during salt withdrawal has resulted in zones of intense faulting along the zone of contact of the pod and the underlying basement, and also on the flanks of pods as the margins collapsed under further salt withdrawal. This deformation occurred under relatively shallow burial depths and is largely expressed by disaggregation zones and phyllosilicate fault rocks. Fault property averaging algorithms (e.g. shale gouge ratio), indicate that the sands should communicate across the juxtapositions, implying that the fluids and pressures should equilibrate between reservoir sands. However, the stratigraphic differences across major shales in both fluid geochemistry and pressure caused by draw-down are preserved despite the presence of these faults. The preservation of stratigraphic compartments indicates that for these faults the deformation mechanism was probably dominated by clay smear, in which the shale-prone sequence was smeared down the fault planes without losing its coherence. This style of stratigraphic compartmentalization occurs across several shale-prone intervals that are correlatable across the region. In some cases these mark the boundaries to major changes in fluvial depositional character, provenance and floodplain drainage, suggesting an extrinsic control that led to shale packages defining consistent barriers in all the fields. Other shale barriers do not show major changes in depositional character and, although correlatable, appear to be the product of semi-regional advance and retreat of the fluvial systems, possibly combined with nodal avulsion. In contrast to reservoirs deposited by large exorheic rivers, the terminal nature of these dryland fluvial systems appears to have resulted in the repeated interfingering of fluvial and floodbasin facies over a scale of many tens of kilometres. As a result such terminal fluvial reservoirs are prone to stratigraphic compartmentalization. However, thinner shales are prone to breaching by fluvial erosion and as a result not all correlatable shale events form barriers and only a subset will compartmentalize. Mitigation against this compartmentalization requires a development strategy where well trajectory and perforation maximizes stratigraphic exposure.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2007-11-01
    Print ISSN: 1354-0793
    Electronic ISSN: 2041-496X
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 1996-05-01
    Print ISSN: 0016-7649
    Topics: Geosciences
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