Petroleum Geology (Module PPT) Final Examination

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Reservoir rock

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Reservoir rock

is a place that oil migrates to and id held underground

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Coring

processes used to recover formation samples from petroleum reservoirs

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Reservoir rock samples

are used for reservoir description and definition, reservoir characterization and to enhance both geological petrophysical nature of reservoir.

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Sidewall sampling tool

can be used to obtain small plugs from the formation. The tool is run on a wireline after the hole has been drilled.

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Sidewall cores

are useful for identifying hydrocarbon zones, when viewed under UV light

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Whole core

provides larger samples; better and more consistent representation of formation; better for heterogeneous rocks or for more complex lithology

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Plugs or sidewall cores

smaller samples; less representative of heterogeneous formations; within 1 to 2% of whole cores for medium-to-high porosity formation

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Standard analysis

porosity; horizontal permeability to air; grain density

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Special core analysis

vertical permeability to air; relative permeability; capillary pressure; cementation exponent and saturation exponent

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Porosity and permeability

both are important properties that are related to fluids in sediment and sedimentary rocks

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Porosity

the volume of void space in an sediment and sedimentary rock

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Permeability

related to how easily a fluid will pass through any granular material

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Total or absolute porosity

is the total void space in the rock whether or not in contributes to fluid flow

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Effective porosity

implies the ration of the total volume of interconnected voids Vp to the bulk volume Vb of the rock; percentage of interconnected void space with respect to the bulk volume

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Double porous or fracture-porous media

rock having both fracture and intergranular pores

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Fracture porosity

is a form of secondary porosity generated by tectonic fracturing of the rock

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Micro-porosity

part of the pore space that has a characteristic dimension less than 1 micron

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Vugular porosity

is the pore space consisting of cavities or vugs; can occur in rocks prone dissolution, such as limestone, in which case is secondary porosity

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Secondary porosity

is the porosity created through alteration of rock, commonly by processes such as dolomitization, dissolution and fracturing

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Primary porosity

is the space between grains that were not compacted together completely

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Sorting

is the tendency of sedimentary rocks to have grains that are similarly sized

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Poorly sorted

sediment displays a wide range of grain sizes and hence has decreased porosity

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Well-sorted

indicates a grain size distribution that is fairly uniform

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Packing density

the arrangement of the particles in the deposit

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Grain size

has no influence in porosity

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Compaction

particles are forced into closer packing by the weight of overlying deposits, reducing porosity

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Cementation

precipitation of new minerals from pore waters causes cementation of the grains and acts to fill the pore spaces, reducing porosity

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Clays

may form by the chemical alteration of pre-existing minerals after burial

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Feldspars

are particularly common clay-forming minerals

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Clay minerals

are very fine-grained and may accumulate in the pore spaces, reducing porosity

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Quartz

relatively soluble when pore waters have a low

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Pressure solution

the solubility of mineral grains increases under an applied stress and the process of solution is under stress

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Fracturing

  • particularly important in producing porosity in rocks with low primary porosity

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Density logs

uses radioactive source to generate gamma rays

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Neutron log

logging tool emits high energy neutrons into formation

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Acoustic (sonic) log

tool usually consists of one sound transmitter (above) and two receivers (below)

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Openhole logging tools

most common method of determining porosity

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Absolute permeability

the permeability of the porous medium if a single fluid is flowing

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Effective permeability

permeability of a fluid if another fluid is present

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Relative permeability

effective permeability divided by the absolute permeability

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Henry Darcy

hydraulic engineer; the discoverer of Darcy’s law; his law is a foundation stone for several fields of study including ground-water hydrology, soil physics and pet eng.

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Original porosity

constituted when the formation was laid

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Secondary porosity

history of the rock

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Effective porosity

continuous or interconnected porosity

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Non effective porosity

discontinuous or isolated porosity

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Seismic

define the structure of the subsurface to perform maps

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Compressive (P, like primary)

the faster one, the direction of displacement of the particles is parallel to the propagation axis

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Shear (S like secondary)

the displacement is perpendicular to the propagation axis

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Surface waves or Stoneley

slower, their displacement follow the surfaces where the characteristics are changing

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Mud-logging

data acquisition during drilling

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Petrophysic

physical properties of the porous network

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framework, matrix, cement, pores

Four major components of sandstone

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bulk density, sonic (acoustic), compensated form

3 main log types

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seismic, mud-logging, core, logging, tests, monitoring

Main ways to get information

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sandstones; limestone and carbonate rocks

Examples of reservoir rock:

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Reservoirs

are not underground "lakes" of oil; they are made up of porous and permeable rocks that can hold significant amounts of oil and gas within their pore spaces.

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Diagenesis

The first stage in the transformation of freshly deposited organic matter into petroleum is called _______. This process begins at the sedimentary interface and extends to varying depths,

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Catagenesis

is the stage of thermaldegradation of kerogen that forms oil and gas.

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Metagenesis

The metagenesis stage is reached at great depths, or in areas of high geothermal gradients at shallower depths. Metagenesis usually begins at depths of approximately 4,000 meters.

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Paraffins

also called alkanes and have the general fomula of CnH2n+2,

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Naphthenes

or cycloparaffins are ring or cyclic saturated hydrocarbons with the general formula of CnH2n.

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Aromatics

are an important series of hydrocarbons found in almost every petroleum mixture from any part of the world. This series of aromatics is called alkylbenzenes and have a general formula of CnH2n

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Primary Migration

expulsion of petroleum from the source rock and also refers to movement of hydrocarbons

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Secondary Migration

movement of oil or gas within reservoir

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Subsurface Mapping

is a valuable tool for locating undereround features that may form trapso outline the boundaries of a possible reservoir.

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Structural Contour Maps

show a series of lines drawn at regular intervals.

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Liquid Petroleum

known as crude oil" to distinguish it from refined oil". It is most important commercially.

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Natural Gas

which is the lighter fraction of hydrocarbons, can be free or dissolved.

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Asphalt, Tar, Pitch

these are solid or semisolid forms of hydrocarbons, the heavy fraction.

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Lopatin's TTI V. Lopatin (1971)

recognized the dependence of thermal maturation from temperature AND time. temperatures are weighted with the residence time. This so

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Vitrinite Reflectance (Ro)

measures the reflectance of vitrinite

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Source rock

refers to the formation in which oil and gas originate

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Gravity and Magnetic Surveys

one of the tools used for mineral-bearing ore bodies or even oil-bearing

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Geochemistry

ldentify possible source rocks (whole rock): usually black to dark brown in color.

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Geologic Fieldwork

Rock identification and sampling

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Cross-Sections

Structural, stratigraphic, and topographic information can be portrayed on

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Isopach Maps

are similar in appearance to contour maps but show variations in the thickness of the bed.

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Lithofacies Maps

show, changes in lithologic character and how it varies horizontally within the formation. This type of map has contours.

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Level of organic maturation (LOM)

is based on coal ranks.

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Pyrolysis

techniques are performed directly on rock samples and offer the major clues in the systematic analysis of kerogen

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The Rock Eval instrument

provides a fast determination of the type and evolution stage of kerogen

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Optical Techniques: Transmitted Light Optical

techniques are widely used to characterize type and maturation of organic matter.

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Optical Studies: Reflected Light

The method most often used to evaluate the maturation of kerogen and to establish the depth range associated with petroleum generation is vitrinite reflectance.

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STRUCTURAL TRAPS

are primarily the result of folding and faulting or both

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