A novel approach to a
quantitative estimate of
permeability from resistivity
log measurements
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Abstract
Description of the material. In this paper a novel methodology for the estimation of the formation
permeability, based on the integration of resistivity modeling and near wellbore modeling,
is presented. Results obtained from the application to a real case is shown and discussed.
The well log interpretation process provides a reliable estimation of the main petrophysical
parameters such as porosity, fluid saturations and shale content, but the formation permeability
is traditionally obtained through laboratory tests on plugs, at the scale of centimeters, and
through well test interpretation, at the scale of tens or hundreds of meters.
However, log measurements, and in particular resistivity logs, are strongly affected by the presence
of the near wellbore zone invaded by mud filtrate. In turn, the extension of the invaded
zone depends on formation properties and, in particular, on permeability.
As a consequence, the resistivity measured by the tools (the apparent resistivity) has to be
properly corrected through a resistivity modeling process to obtain the true formation resistivity
and the geometry and resistivity of the invaded zone.
Resistivity profiles within the invaded zone are function of fluid properties, petrophysical properties
and rock-fluid interaction properties. The novelty of the approach is to numerically simulate
the mud invasion phenomenon and match the resistivity profile provided by resistivity modeling
to estimate the formation permeability. In the proposed methodology the match of the resistivity
profile is obtained by integrating the near wellbore simulator with an optimization algorithm.
Application. This novel approach was applied to a heterogeneous shaly-sand oil-bearing reservoir
in the Norwegian offshore area. The analyzed sequence was characterized by a high
degree of variations in the layers’ thickness, from meters down to below tools’ vertical resolution.
A complete set of wireline logs were acquired in the considered well; several cores were
cut and routine and special core analyses performed.
Results, Observations, and Conclusions. First, a conventional petrophysical characterization was
achieved and the appropriate resistivity corrections were calculated. Then, the modeled resistivity
was used as the input for the optimization algorithm so as to obtain a continuous quantitative estimation
of permeability in the entire logged interval. The results were satisfactorily compared to core
measurements: in both thick conventional layers and thinner beds the match was very accurate.
Significance of subject matter. The new approach provided a robust permeability estimate
also in un-cored intervals and, more generally, can be used to predict permeability in un-cored
and un-tested wells