Water-flooding and consolidation of reservoir chalk - effect on porosity and Biot's coefficient

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Water-flooding and consolidation of reservoir chalk - effect on porosity and Biot's coefficient. / Gram, Tobias B.; Ditlevsen, Frederik P.; Mosegaard, Klaus; Fabricius, Ida L.

In: Geophysical Prospecting, Vol. 69, No. 3, 19.11.2020, p. 495-513.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gram, TB, Ditlevsen, FP, Mosegaard, K & Fabricius, IL 2020, 'Water-flooding and consolidation of reservoir chalk - effect on porosity and Biot's coefficient', Geophysical Prospecting, vol. 69, no. 3, pp. 495-513. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2478.13047

APA

Gram, T. B., Ditlevsen, F. P., Mosegaard, K., & Fabricius, I. L. (2020). Water-flooding and consolidation of reservoir chalk - effect on porosity and Biot's coefficient. Geophysical Prospecting, 69(3), 495-513. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2478.13047

Vancouver

Gram TB, Ditlevsen FP, Mosegaard K, Fabricius IL. Water-flooding and consolidation of reservoir chalk - effect on porosity and Biot's coefficient. Geophysical Prospecting. 2020 Nov 19;69(3):495-513. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2478.13047

Author

Gram, Tobias B. ; Ditlevsen, Frederik P. ; Mosegaard, Klaus ; Fabricius, Ida L. / Water-flooding and consolidation of reservoir chalk - effect on porosity and Biot's coefficient. In: Geophysical Prospecting. 2020 ; Vol. 69, No. 3. pp. 495-513.

Bibtex

@article{23f757f5116e4799a9378cfa73e0976b,
title = "Water-flooding and consolidation of reservoir chalk - effect on porosity and Biot's coefficient",
abstract = "Improved oil recovery from chalk reservoirs by water-flooding may cause mechanical weakening and change in elasticity. Confined compressive strength testing of chalk from a North Sea reservoir was done in water-saturated and oil-saturated conditions. During testing, elastic wave velocities were sampled by ultrasonic transducers, so that subsequently Biot's coefficient could be modelled. The porosity declined via an 'elastic phase', a 'transitional phase', an 'elastoplastic phase' and a 'strain hardening phase', but Biot's coefficient indicates that these terms may be partly misleading. In the 'elastic phase', porosity and Biot's coefficient decrease, indicating elastoplastic deformation. In the 'transitional phase', Biot's coefficient increases as a reflection of breaking contact cement (pore collapse), whereas Biot's coefficient remains stable in the 'elastoplastic phase', indicating elastic deformation on the virgin curve. Plastic deformation takes place during phases of creep, where both porosity and Biot's coefficient decrease. Similarly, in the 'strain hardening phase', both porosity and Biot's coefficient decrease as a reflection of elastoplastic deformation. For chalk with 45%-47% porosity, the 'transitional phase' begins at 8 MPa axial stress when water-saturated and at 12 MPa when oil-saturated. For chalk with 41%-43% porosity, the corresponding stresses are 16 and 20 MPa. For chalk with 32%-36% porosity, the corresponding stresses are 23 and 31 MPa. Chalk samples with irreducible water saturation and movable oil were water-flooded. They yield at stresses close to corresponding oil-saturated samples, but after flooding show compaction trends not significantly different from the water-saturated samples. Water-flooding promotes pore collapse as reflected in an increasing Biot's coefficient. The consequent softening effect on acoustic impedance is small as compared with the effect of increasing fluid density. With respect to 4D seismic, water-flooding causes distinctly higher acoustic impedance and Poisson's ratio irrespective of compaction.",
keywords = "Rock physics, 4D, Deformation, Porosity, Partial saturation, PETROLEUM",
author = "Gram, {Tobias B.} and Ditlevsen, {Frederik P.} and Klaus Mosegaard and Fabricius, {Ida L.}",
year = "2020",
month = nov,
day = "19",
doi = "10.1111/1365-2478.13047",
language = "English",
volume = "69",
pages = "495--513",
journal = "Geophysical Prospecting",
issn = "0016-8025",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Water-flooding and consolidation of reservoir chalk - effect on porosity and Biot's coefficient

AU - Gram, Tobias B.

AU - Ditlevsen, Frederik P.

AU - Mosegaard, Klaus

AU - Fabricius, Ida L.

PY - 2020/11/19

Y1 - 2020/11/19

N2 - Improved oil recovery from chalk reservoirs by water-flooding may cause mechanical weakening and change in elasticity. Confined compressive strength testing of chalk from a North Sea reservoir was done in water-saturated and oil-saturated conditions. During testing, elastic wave velocities were sampled by ultrasonic transducers, so that subsequently Biot's coefficient could be modelled. The porosity declined via an 'elastic phase', a 'transitional phase', an 'elastoplastic phase' and a 'strain hardening phase', but Biot's coefficient indicates that these terms may be partly misleading. In the 'elastic phase', porosity and Biot's coefficient decrease, indicating elastoplastic deformation. In the 'transitional phase', Biot's coefficient increases as a reflection of breaking contact cement (pore collapse), whereas Biot's coefficient remains stable in the 'elastoplastic phase', indicating elastic deformation on the virgin curve. Plastic deformation takes place during phases of creep, where both porosity and Biot's coefficient decrease. Similarly, in the 'strain hardening phase', both porosity and Biot's coefficient decrease as a reflection of elastoplastic deformation. For chalk with 45%-47% porosity, the 'transitional phase' begins at 8 MPa axial stress when water-saturated and at 12 MPa when oil-saturated. For chalk with 41%-43% porosity, the corresponding stresses are 16 and 20 MPa. For chalk with 32%-36% porosity, the corresponding stresses are 23 and 31 MPa. Chalk samples with irreducible water saturation and movable oil were water-flooded. They yield at stresses close to corresponding oil-saturated samples, but after flooding show compaction trends not significantly different from the water-saturated samples. Water-flooding promotes pore collapse as reflected in an increasing Biot's coefficient. The consequent softening effect on acoustic impedance is small as compared with the effect of increasing fluid density. With respect to 4D seismic, water-flooding causes distinctly higher acoustic impedance and Poisson's ratio irrespective of compaction.

AB - Improved oil recovery from chalk reservoirs by water-flooding may cause mechanical weakening and change in elasticity. Confined compressive strength testing of chalk from a North Sea reservoir was done in water-saturated and oil-saturated conditions. During testing, elastic wave velocities were sampled by ultrasonic transducers, so that subsequently Biot's coefficient could be modelled. The porosity declined via an 'elastic phase', a 'transitional phase', an 'elastoplastic phase' and a 'strain hardening phase', but Biot's coefficient indicates that these terms may be partly misleading. In the 'elastic phase', porosity and Biot's coefficient decrease, indicating elastoplastic deformation. In the 'transitional phase', Biot's coefficient increases as a reflection of breaking contact cement (pore collapse), whereas Biot's coefficient remains stable in the 'elastoplastic phase', indicating elastic deformation on the virgin curve. Plastic deformation takes place during phases of creep, where both porosity and Biot's coefficient decrease. Similarly, in the 'strain hardening phase', both porosity and Biot's coefficient decrease as a reflection of elastoplastic deformation. For chalk with 45%-47% porosity, the 'transitional phase' begins at 8 MPa axial stress when water-saturated and at 12 MPa when oil-saturated. For chalk with 41%-43% porosity, the corresponding stresses are 16 and 20 MPa. For chalk with 32%-36% porosity, the corresponding stresses are 23 and 31 MPa. Chalk samples with irreducible water saturation and movable oil were water-flooded. They yield at stresses close to corresponding oil-saturated samples, but after flooding show compaction trends not significantly different from the water-saturated samples. Water-flooding promotes pore collapse as reflected in an increasing Biot's coefficient. The consequent softening effect on acoustic impedance is small as compared with the effect of increasing fluid density. With respect to 4D seismic, water-flooding causes distinctly higher acoustic impedance and Poisson's ratio irrespective of compaction.

KW - Rock physics

KW - 4D

KW - Deformation

KW - Porosity

KW - Partial saturation

KW - PETROLEUM

U2 - 10.1111/1365-2478.13047

DO - 10.1111/1365-2478.13047

M3 - Journal article

VL - 69

SP - 495

EP - 513

JO - Geophysical Prospecting

JF - Geophysical Prospecting

SN - 0016-8025

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 252878009