4.7 Article

The influence of subseismic-scale fracture interconnectivity on fluid flow in fracture corridors of the Brejoes carbonate karst system, Brazil

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 141, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2022.105689

Keywords

Carbonate rocks; Carbonate reservoirs; Karst; Fracture corridors; Caves

Funding

  1. Shell Brasil [ANP 20502-1]
  2. Brazilian agency CNPq

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The present study used a multitool approach to characterize fractures in large fracture corridors, caves, and canyons and investigated their impact on fluid flow in carbonate units. The study revealed that fracture corridors comprise multiple subvertical and conjugate fracture sets, which have a significant influence on fluid flow. The formation of secondary macroporosity provides insights for the study of reservoirs formed in similar structural controls.
The present study used a multitool approach to characterize fractures of several orders of magnitude in large fracture corridors, caves, and canyons to investigate their impact on fluid flow in carbonate units. The study area is the Brejoes carbonate karst system that is located in the Neoproterozoic Salitre Formation in the Irece Basin, Sa & SIM;o Francisco Craton, Brazil. The approach included satellite imagery, used for interpreting the regional structural context, Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) and ground-based Light Detection And Ranging (LiDAR) imagery, used for detailed structural interpretation. Regional interpretation revealed that fracture corridors, caves and canyons occur along a N-S-oriented anticline hinge. An advanced stage of karstification caused fracture enlargement and intrabed dissolution, and the formation of caves and canyons. A river captured by the highly fractured zone along the anticline hinge played an important role as an erosive agent. Detailed characterization of fracture corridors comprised structural analysis, topological studies, persistence estimations, power-law fitting of fracture trace length distributions, and identification of network backbones. Our results indicate that fracture corridors comprise four subvertical fracture sets: N-S and E-W and a conjugate pair, NNE-SSW and NW-SE. Fractures observed in the caves show the same dominant directions. Fracture directions are consistent with a common origin associated with the anticline folding. Fracture traces range from 1.0 m to 300 m, comprising both subseismic (< 50 m) and seismic scale fractures (> 50 m). Networks have dominance of node terminations Y and X (notably Y), CB values higher than 1.8, high P20 and P21 persistence values, and highly interconnected backbones. Fracture network connectivity is associated with power-law exponents greater than 2.5 for the fracture trace distributions, indicating large influence of subseismic-scale fractures on fluid flow. As the final result of folding and karstification, large volumes of secondary macroporosity were created, particularly in the zone of maximum fracture intensity around the hinge zone of the anticline. This scenario can be used to understand better oil reservoirs formed in similar structural controls in near-surface conditions.

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