4.5 Article

Influencing mechanics and correction method of nuclear magnetic resonance measurement in igneous rocks reservoir

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.petrol.2021.109648

Keywords

NMR Logging; Porosity correction; T-2 distribution shape correction; Diffusion relaxation; Susceptibility

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41774144, 42174149]
  2. National Major Project titled Development of Major Oil & Gas Fields and Coal Bed Methane'' [2016ZX05014-001]

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Using numerical simulation and laboratory experiment, this study demonstrates that paramagnetic minerals affect the magnetization of fluids in pores and the rate of echo decay in igneous rocks, resulting in a substantial underestimation of NMR porosity. A new approach is proposed to correct the NMR measurements, improving the agreement between corrected porosity and T-2 distribution with the model.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurement provides lithology-independent porosity and pore structure for sedimentary reservoirs. Recently, oil and gas were discovered in igneous rock formations, however, NMR logging porosity is substantially lower than the true porosity, and the T-2 distributions does not characterize the pore-size distributions. These observations limit the use of NMR logging in igneous rock formations and new research is needed to be developed. To address this gap in the literature, using numerical simulation of NMR behavior, we conduct a theoretical study to examine the impact of magnetic susceptibility, echo spacing, and fluid type on the T-2 distributions in igneous rock. The simulation results and laboratory experiment show that, the paramagnetic minerals affect the magnetization of fluids in pores and rate of the echo decay, and NMR porosity is thus significantly reduced. To effectively correct the NMR measurement, a new approach is proposed to improve the underestimation of NMR porosity and T-2 distribution shifting to shorter times. For a pore model, the corrected porosity and T-2 distribution are both in good agreement with the model. In a case study from Chepaizi area of Junggar Basin, China, the corrected NMR porosity matches well with core measurement, and the corrected T-2 distribution shifts to longer times more than before. Moreover, bound fluid volume and movable fluid volume are both corrected, and the NMR permeability also agrees well with core laboratory measurement, which proves that the correction method effective. Therefore, this technology enables NMR log for evaluating the igneous rock reservoir quality.

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