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SBED meeting October 16th 2006

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Use of SBED as a tool for permeability modelling in heterolithic tidal ... Mini-permeameter data are better, but rarely taken as standard ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SBED meeting October 16th 2006


1
Use of SBED as a tool for permeability modelling
in heterolithic tidal reservoirs a test study
from the Njord Field
  • SBED meeting October 16th 2006
  • Mike Young

2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Motivation behind the study
  • Use of SBED in Hydro
  • Tilje Formation, Njord Field - SBED test study
  • Challenge of modelling the Tilje Fm.
  • Why SBED?
  • Data set used in the study
  • Methodology/workflow
  • Results
  • Summary/comments on the SBED approach

3
Introduction
  • Motivation
  • Theoretically SBED is a good concept
  • Hydro has supported SBED for some time
  • Test out in practice can the tool be
    implemented in the BUs ?
  • Good test case Heterolithic tidal facies of the
    Tilje Fm., Njord Field
  • Difficult to characterize using conventional
    petrophysical/property modelling
  • SBED/TBED designed to model tidal heterogeneity
  • Internal use in Hydro
  • Limited to a research activity
  • Low priority activity
  • At present, it is difficult and time consuming
    (expensive) to get results !
  • Uncertainty in SBED is a key issue that is poorly
    addressed

4
Challenge of modelling the Tilje Fm., Njord
Thin intercalations of mudstone and sandstone
layers will have a strong influence on the flow
properties!
5
Why use SBED?
  • Question
  • Can we derive petrophysical properties from these
    data (core plugs) that are representative at the
    grid-cell scale of a reservoir model ?
  • Problems
  • Kv and Kh are NOT well characterized by core
    plugs or wireline data.
  • Permeability data measured from core plugs that
    have a sample volume below the REV will be
    unrepresentative.
  • Therefore we see extreme variability of plug
    permeabilities (Kv, Kh) even inside small
    vertical intervals.
  • Answer
  • No! But using SBED to model the heterogeneity at
    a more suitable volume (REV) and using flow-based
    upscaling to determine properties could be a more
    realistic solution

Core plug data Tilje 3A Formation
Thin intercalations of mudstone and sandstone
layers will have a strong influence on the flow
properties!
6
Data set
  • Cored well 6407/7-4 (Njord East Flank)
  • Used as a test case
  • Thick Tilje 3A
  • Good petrophysical data set
  • Core plug mini-perm. data
  • Wireline and synthetic poro-perm data
  • Tidal heterolithics (Tilje 3A)
  • Vertically aggraded tidal flat deposits
  • Composed of tidal bundles
  • Wavy, flaser and lenticular beds

7
Core plug poro. perm. data (Tilje 3A, Njord)
Correlation 0,67
8
SBED Methodology/Workflow used
  • Generate bedding-scale sub-models/SBED templates
  • Petrophysical data analysis (core
    plugs/mini-perm. data)
  • Populate sub-models with petrophysical values
  • Calibrate SBED petrophysical input values
  • Moving window upscaling to generate the SBED
    output results

9
Generate SBED sub-models
6407/7- 4 Tilje 3A
  • Split up core into intervals modelled with
    specific SBED templates
  • Different sub-models needed to capture variations
    in the sandshale ratio (NTG)
  • Intervals of approx. 5 sandshale (SBED NTG)
  • i.e. 10, 15, 20 .. 100 sand
  • Key parameters
  • Sand to shale ratio (NTG in SBED)
  • Geometry, thickness variation and frequency of
    the mud layers
  • Mean STD for porosity and permeability
  • Values needed for each lithotype in each submodel

50 m
26 different SBED models needed to capture
variation in sandshale (NTG) and sedimentary
architecture
Model size 30x30x30 cm
10
Sandshale ratio key in these tidal facies
Key modelling parameter - it will have a strong
influence on vertical and horizontal
permeability. Predictable relationship between
sandshale ratio and geometry/continuity of the
bedforms.
11
Petrophysical input data
  • Porosity and permeability for each of the
    lithological components of the model (i.e. ebb
    sand, flood sand, mud)
  • Mean and STD values
  • Variogram value
  • Poro-perm correlation (e.g. 0,67)

12
Petrophysical data analysis
  • We need to find permeability/porosity values for
    each lithotype (sand 1 2, mud)
  • Not an easy task
  • There is typically a biased data base sampling at
    the wrong volume (core plugs)
  • Mini-permeameter data are better, but rarely
    taken as standard
  • Especially difficult to get permeability values
    for the mud layers
  • Key steps Filter out biased plugs that contain
    multiple lithotypes
  • Asses porosity and permeability distributions
    for the entire dataset and for subsets
  • e.g. specific intervals of NTG, depth intervals
  • Use these results as a starting point !

Mini-perm Plug data
Few data points below 50
sandshale ratio (essentially SBED submodel
divisions)
13
Porosity (sand)
Shapes of the distributions sketched to
highlight their nature
  • Porosity distribution for the entire data set
    (sand layers)
  • Need to make sense of this and break it down into
    subsets
  • Porosity distribution for specific intervals of
    NTG (sandshale ratios)
  • Divisions based on visual inspection of the core
    and determination of intervals with similar
    sand type
  • Based on splitting up the data set into various
    different intervals of NTG
  • Based on this data it is possible to determine
    mean and STD values
  • May not be simple Gaussian distributions !

14
Permeability (sand)
  • Distributions for the NTG intervals
  • Core plug data and mini-perm
  • Complex distributions, commonly with at least two
    sand types in each of the NTG intervals !
  • Permeability distribution for the entire
  • data set

Shapes of the distributions sketched to
highlight their nature
Shapes of the distributions sketched to
highlight their nature
  • Core plug data are biased, so mini-perm data are
    better at capturing values for individual sand
    layers
  • However, mini-perm data show bias towards the
    higher perm. layers !

15
Effect of varying input data (petrophysics)
  • Results from upscaling of all realisations of
    SBED submodels for the Tilje 3A, 6407/7-4
  • 5 different model versions - same geometric
    input, but different petrophysical input
  • i.e. the variation is related almost exclusively
    to the petrophysics
  • Key observation The petrophysical input data
    have a significant impact on the results!

16
Calibration of the SBED model input
  • An important step is to calibrate the
    petrophysical values in the models
  • Key question Have we captured the true variation
    in petrophysical values ?
  • Answer Almost certainly not at the first attempt
    !
  • Need to generate pseudo core plugs from the
    SBED models
  • Extract volumes from the models that are the same
    as the actual core plugs
  • These need to be upscaled (flow based, fixed
    boundary) and compared to the actual core plug
    data
  • Compare the porosity-permeability cross-plot
  • Compare the porosity and permeability frequency
    distributions

90 Sand model populated with permeability
17
  • Input petrophysics should be adjusted until an
    acceptable match is obtained between pseudo and
    real core plugs
  • It is likely that several iterations of this
    process will be needed !

18
Results
  • Several different options here
  • Chosen to build a stacked model for the cored
    interval i.e. a direct representation of the
    core
  • Moving window upscaling enables upscaled results
    at a log scale (e.g. every 12.5 cm) for Kh, Kv,
    Porosity
  • Upscaling method is dynamic (flow-based) method
    with fixed boundary conditions
  • Why log scale ?
  • Consistent with wireline data (same scale)
  • Can be used together with wireline data to
    predict properties (esp. Kh, Kv) in non-cored
    wells
  • The software Facimage was used to generate
    electrofacies and predict permeability in
    non-cored wells/intervals SBED results used as
    training data

19
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20
Summary
  • In tidal heterolithic facies (e.g. Tilje Fm.) it
    is difficult to determine representative
    permeability values using conventional core plugs
  • SBED method was used to generate log-scale
    permeability based on process based modeling of
    small-scale geology (bedding scale)
  • Moving window upscalling enabled Kh and Kv values
    to be generated at the log scale (ca. 12,5 cm),
    consistent with other wireline data
  • Kh and Kv logs from SBED can be used as
    training data for permeability and facies
    prediction in non-cored wells
  • E.g. Using the NNI method in Paradigm Facimage
  • SBED/Facimage can provide a more realistic (Kh
    and Kv) and consistent data input to the
    geo-model (RMS)
  • All input data with a similar sample volume
  • Bedding scale, but not necessarily representative
    at the grid block !
  • Additional modelling and upscaling step may be
    necessary

21
Comments on the use of SBED
  • Calibrating the input data is an
    important/critical step
  • Otherwise it is difficult to determine whether
    the results can be trusted
  • Potentially a large range in uncertainty
  • SBED could be equally as uncertain as
    conventional plug-based methods
  • Manual and very time consuming, but critical step
    in the workflow !!
  • SBED projects are labour intensive and thus
    expensive
  • Possibly hundreds of man hours for a relatively
    small project !
  • Especially with the manual calibration technique
  • SBED is a specialist tool and still somewhat
    immature
  • Not recommended for wider use in Hydro BUs yet !

22
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