
Oil & Natural Gas Projects
Exploration and Production Technologies
NMR Characterizations of Heterogeneous Porous Media
DE-AC26-99BC15202
Program
This project was selected in response to DOE's Oil Exploration and Production
solicitation DE-RA26-98BC15200.
Project Goal
The project goal is the development of reliable methods for predicting macroscopic
properties that are important for describing the flow storage of one or more
fluid phases in reservoirs at an intrinsic scale approaching that of a local
volume average or representative element volume using nuclear magnetic resonance
(NMR).
Performer
Texas A&M University
College Station, TX
Project Results
In Stage I, the project developed advanced core analysis tools to determine
macroscopic properties-porosity and absolute and relative permeability-within
heterogeneous core samples. In Stage II, the project used these methods, together
with additional NMR spectroscopic measurements, to obtain data for development
of predictive methods. In Stage III, the project developed improved relations
for predicting permeabilities and testing a novel method for predicting relative
permeability from NMR well-log observable properties.
Benefits
The new method for the estimation of surface relaxivity enables the researcher
to include the effect of a distribution of pore sizes in the model. As a result,
it gives improved estimates of surface relaxivity and the corresponding pore-size
distributions. Pore size distribution is valuable for determining the flow capacity
of more than one fluid phase within a reservoir.
Background
The detailed knowledge of rock and fluid properties is essential to the success
of petroleum reservoir management and characterization. However, the study of
heterogeneous media has been limited by the lack of methods to spatially resolve
properties within porous media. Conventional methods utilize inflow and outflow
measurements, and often do not adequately resolve heterogeneities.
NMR spectroscopy and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can give noninvasive
measurements within media. Suitable interpretation of the data provides unprecedented
opportunities for resolving fluid states to determine macroscopic properties
important for describing the flow of one or more fluid phases in reservoirs.
Project Summary
Methods for determining the surface relaxivity from measured data were developed
and tested with data obtained from samples provided by ExxonMobil. The new method
avoids the use of a certain mathematical short-time approximation in the data
analysis, which has been shown to be unsuitable.
Numerical work was completed to simulate two-phase displacement experiments
using all three spatial dimensions when estimating two-phase flow functions
relative to permeability and capillary pressure properties. The modification
of the computer core was completed, including tests for the changes observed
in specific examples.
The computer code SENDRA, previously used to simulate two-phase displacement
experiments, is limited to one or two spatial-dimension problems. Numerical
work has extended the simulator to three-dimensional applications to simulate
three-dimensional problems; thus the source code of SENDRA has been modified.
The final step was the integration of the modified code with SENDRA and testing
on three-dimensional cases.
Current Status (October 2005)
The project is complete.
Project Start: May 3, 1999
Project End: February 27, 2004
Anticipated DOE Contribution: $809,209
Performer Contribution: $202,302 (20% of total)
Contact Information
NETL - Purna Halder (purna.halder@netlcdoe.gov or 918-699-2084)
Texas A&M- John Slattery (slattery@tamu.edu or 409-845-3483)
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