Obtain NMR measurement of porosity, permeability, and fluid volumes independent of the rock matrix.
Published: 10/26/2011
Published: 10/26/2011
Standard log suites, which were developed for conventional reservoirs, characterize the Eagle Ford shale play as a uniform matrix. Analysis of logs with this conventional resolution cannot easily find where the best potential for oil production may occur.
Magnetic resonance logging has long been applied to discern moveable from nonmoveable fluids regardless of the matrix, which is of great utility in clay-bearing formations. The new 50-burst application improves the statistics for the smallest pores by enabling the collection of more data by an advanced prepolarizing magnetic resonance tool. The result is a 6-in or greater resolution of the clay-bound micropore region of the rock.
The TLD tool uses three detectors to obtain a high-resolution 8-in density output. The TLD detector with 2-in resolution is normally applied to correct for minor wellbore changes resulting from the hole condition and mudcake. In the Eagle Ford the matrix is primarily carbonate and the well-bores are typically smooth. This logging environment allows use of the 2-in detector as a stand-alone porosity device to improve the visibility and reliability of the TLD curves.
The Eagle Ford is highly laminated with thin laminations. Run with a conventional logging suite, the 8-in-resolution density cannot differentiate laminations with substantial porosity. However, logging analysis combining the 50-burst magnetic resonance application and high-resolution TLD readily identifies laminated pay by differentiating very small pores, micropores, and poten-tially oil-bearing matrix. Standard-resolution analysis presents only an average of the matrix, which cannot discriminate laminations.
Challenge: Discriminate intervals with the best production potential in what appears to be uniform matrix on standard log suites.
Solution: Run the newly developed 50-burst magnetic resonance acquisition application in combination with the Three-Detector Lithology Density (TLD) tool to discern both extremely low-porosity and mediumporosity laminations though statistical analysis.
Results: Used the improved ability to locate oilbearing laminated intervals to optimize placement of four additional laterals.