Carbonate Pore Shape Evaluation Using Digital Image Analysis, Tomography, and Effective Medium Theory

Author:

Ziganshin Eduard1,Nourgaliev Danis1,Bayuk Irina2,Kadyrov Rail1,Nguyen Thanh Hung1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Geology and Oil and Gas Technologies, Kazan (Volga Region) Federal University, 420008 Kazan, Russia

2. Schmidt Institute of Physics of the Earth of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 123242 Moscow, Russia

Abstract

Carbonate rocks have a wide variety of pore shapes and different types of grains, which greatly affect the elastic properties and characteristics of the reservoir. This causes certain difficulties in petroelastic modeling. One of the problems is the scale of the input data, which is then used to build the rock physics model. The paper presents the results of studying three core samples of carbonate rocks of the Upper Devonian and Lower Carboniferous age, which are located in the South Tatar arch (Volga-Ural oil and gas basin (Russia)). To evaluate the structural characteristics of the pore space, the effective medium theory is used. The input data are the results of laboratory studies that include measurements of the velocities of longitudinal and transverse waves, porosity, and thin section and computed tomography analysis. When using the computed tomography, the core samples are analyzed at different resolution (12–37 µm/voxel). The tomography studies of pore space at different scales provide rather different values of porosity and pore aspect ratio. The tomography-based porosity estimations also differ from the experimentally measured porosity (up to 10%). The pore space characteristics provided by different datasets are used to build a rock physics model for the studied rocks that helps to estimate the elastic wave velocities with three different methods of effective medium theory (self-consistent approximation, differential effective medium (DEM), and the Kuster–Toksöz method). A comparison of the velocity estimations with their experimental analogs for dry rocks may indicate the presence of microcracks whose size is beyond the tomography resolution. Improved rock physics models incorporating both pores and microcracks are then used to predict the elastic wave velocities of fluid-saturated rock in a wide porosity range. It is demonstrated that the predicted values significantly differ (up to 30%) from those provided by the rock physics (RP) models constructed without the support of the tomography results. Moreover, other types of models are considered in which the difference in experimental and theoretical velocities is attributed to changes in the host matrix properties as compared to the calcite polycrystal, which are caused by various reasons.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Computer Science Applications,Process Chemistry and Technology,General Engineering,Instrumentation,General Materials Science

Reference40 articles.

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