Formation evaluation involves using tools to measure properties of rock and fluid in a wellbore to analyze hydrocarbon reservoirs. Key techniques include mud logging to monitor drilling, coring to obtain samples, open-hole wireline logging to characterize formations, logging while drilling for real-time data, formation testing to obtain pressure and fluid samples, and cased-hole logging for monitoring producing wells. The data is used to evaluate potential fluid flow and recovery from reservoirs.
3. Formation Evaluation
What is Formation Evaluation?
Formation Evaluation (FE) is the process of
interpreting a combination of measurements taken
inside a wellbore to detect and quantify oil and
gas reserves in the rock adjacent to the well. FE
data can be gathered with wireline logging
instruments or logging-while-drilling tools .
Study of the physical properties of rocks and the
fluids contained within them.
Data are organized and interpreted by depth and
represented on a graph called a log (a record of
information about the formations through which a
well has been drilled).
4. Formation Evaluation
Why Formation Evaluation?
To evaluate hydrocarbons reservoirs and predict
oil recovery.
To provide the reservoir engineers with the
formations geological and physical parameters
necessary for the construction of a fluid-flow
model of the reservoir.
Measurement of in situ formation fluid pressure
and acquisition of formation fluid samples.
In petroleum exploration and development,
formation evaluation is used to determine the
ability of a borehole to produce petroleum.
5. Mud Logging
Mud logging (or Wellsite Geology) is a well logging
process in which drilling mud and drill bit cuttings
from the formation are evaluated during drilling and
their properties recorded on a strip chart as a visual
analytical tool and stratigraphic cross sectional
representation of the well.
Provide continuous record of penetration rate,
lithology and hydrocarbon shows.
These information supports wireline log data.
From the cuttings, an oil stains or odor of oil may be
detected, become an excellent qualitative indicator.
The fluorescent lamp is also a great help in detecting
oil shows.
6. Mud Logging
The gas record and lithological sample are plotted
along with surface parameters such as rate of
penetration (ROP), Weight On Bit (WOB),rotation
per minute etc. on the mudlog which serve as a tool
for the drilling engineers and mud engineers.
Some problem: a discrepancy between the time the
rock was drilled and the time it reached the surface
particularly for deep wells, where it take two or
move hours to reach the surface.
7. Coring
One way to get more detailed
samples of a formation is by coring,
where formation sample is drilled
out by means of special bit.
This sample can provide:
Detailed lithological decscription.
Porosity, permeability, fluid
saturation and grain density.
These parameters are measured in
the laboratory and serve as a basis
for calibrating the response of the
porosity logging tools and to
establish a porosity/permeability
relationship.
8. Coring
Two techniques commonly used at
present. The first is the "whole
core", a cylinder of rock, usually
about 3" to 4" in diameter and up to
50 feet (15 m) to 60 feet (18 m) long.
It is cut with a "core barrel", a
hollow pipe tipped with a ring-shaped
diamond chip-studded bit that can
cut a plug and bring it to the surface.
Taking a full core is an expensive
operation that usually stops or slows
drilling operation, and can be done
only before the drilling has been
done.
Coring Tool & Core Barrel
9. Coring
The other, cheaper, technique for obtaining samples
of the formation is "Sidewall Coring". In this method,
a steel cylindera coring gunhas hollow-point steel
bullets mounted along its sides and moored to the
gun by short steel cables.
The coring gun is lowered to the bottom of the
interval of interest and the bullets are fired
individually and the core will be retrieved.
Advantages of this technique are low cost and the
ability to sample the formation after it has been
drilled.
10. Core Preservation
Once the core is retrieve to surface then it is
important that it should remain as unchanged as
possible.
The core should be prevented from drying out,
coming into contact with oxygen or being
mechanically damaged.
Core barrel is filled with resin to prevent the
core from moving and to minimize the exposed
surface area.
Freezing the core in freezer containers.
Core sample is wrapped in a plastic film, aluminium
foil and then dipped in molten wax.
11. Core Analysis
Can be divided into two categories:
Conventional Core Analysis.
Special Core Analysis.
Conventional Core Analysis.
The core is usually slabbed, cut lengthwise to
make the structure visible.
Provides information on lithology, residual fluid
saturation, ambient porosity, ambient gas
permeability and grain density.
14. Core Analysis
Special Core Analysis :
Provides the following information:
Porosity and permeability at elevated confining
stress.
Electrical properties such as formation factor
and resistivity index.
Capillary pressure.
Wettability and relative permeability.
Mechanical rock properties such as
compressibility.
Waterflood sensitivity for injectivity and well
performance.
15. Open-hole Logging
Open-hole logging, also known as
well logging is the practice of
making a detailed record (a well
log) of the geologic formations
penetrated by a borehole.
Open hole logs are run before
the oil or gas well is lined with
pipe or cased
16. Principal of Well Logging
A well log is a record of certain formation data
versus depth.
The appropriate downhole logging tools instrument
called sonde, about 3.5 inches in diameter is
lowered into mud-filled hole on logging cable.
This tools will measure the electrical, acoustic, and
radioactive properties of the formation.
The result will be analyzed to determine which of
the layers are porous and permeable, and likely to
contain hidrocarbon.
A depth calibration wheel records the length of
cable in the hole.
17. Principal of Well Logging
Survey is normally done
from the bottom up. As
the sonde is pulled up the
hole, a continuous
measurement signal is sent
to the surface where the
data is processed and
recorded as a curve.
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19. Electrical Logs
Developed by Conrad & Marcel Schlumberger (who
founded Schlumberger Limited), and intoduced to
the US in 1929.
Can be divided into two main types: measurement
of natural electrical current in the rock (SP Log),
and measurement of induced electrical current
(Resistivity Log and Induction Log).
20. (1) Spontaneous Potential (SP) Log
Also known as Self Potential
Log.
SP Log record weak electrical
currents that flow naturally in
the rock next to the wellbore
(natural electricity).
The log shows the boundaries
and thickness of each layer of
rock, especially permeable
(sandstone) and impermeable
(shale).
Because the SP Log is so
simple to obtain and provide
such basic information, it is
the most common log.
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21. (1) Spontaneous Potential (SP) Log
Useful for:
Detecting permeable beds
and it thickness.
Locating their boundaries
and permitting correlation
of such beds.
Determining formation
water resistivity.
Qualitative indication of
bed shaliness.
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22. (2) Resistivity Logs
Use to measure the resistivity of the formation,
and thus the possibility of hc shows.
A sonde sends an electrical signal through the
formation and relays it back to a receiver at the
surface (induced electricity). The surface detector
will measure the formations resistance to the
current.
A rock which contains an oil and/or gas saturation
will have a higher resistivity than the same rock
completely saturated with formation water.
23. (3) Induction Logs
Use to measure the conductivity of the formation,
and thus the possibility of hc shows.
A rock which contains an oil and/or gas saturation
will have a lower conductivity than the same rock
completely saturated with formation water.
Induction logs use an electric coil in the sonde to
generate an alternating current loop in the
formation by induction.
Induction tools t give best results when mud
resistivity is high with respect to formation
resistivity, i.e., fresh mud or non-conductive fluid.
In oil-base mud, which is non conductive, induction
logging is the only option available.
24. (4) Dielectric Logs
Responds essentially to water and is unaffected by
the presence of hydrocarbons.
Particularly important in determining the
irreducible water saturation when oil-based muds
are used.
25. Nuclear Logs
Just as SP and resistivity logs record natural and
induced electrical currents, nuclear logs (also
called radioactivity logs) record natural and
induced radioactivity.
Three type of logs: Gamma Ray Log, Neutron Log
and Formation Density Log.
26. (1) Gamma Ray Log
Record the natural 粒-
radioactivity of rocks
surrounding the borehole.
The 粒-radiation arises from
three elements present in the
rocks, isotopes of potassium,
uranium and thorium.
Useful for defining shale beds
because K, U and Th are largely
concentrated in association
with clay minerals.
It is used to define permeable
beds when SP log cannot be
employed (eg. When Rmf = Rw).
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27. (2) Neutron Log
To obtain a neutron log, a sonde sends atomic
particles called neutrons through the formation.
When the neutrons collide with hydrogen, the
hydrogen slows them down.
The response of the devise is primarily a function
of the hydrogen nuclei concentration.
When the detector records slow neutrons, it means
a lot of hydrogen is present main component of
water and hydrocarbon, but not of rocks.
Considered as porosity log because hydrogen is
mostly present in pore fluids (water, hydrocarbons)
the count rate can be converted into apparent
porosity.
28. (3) Formation Density Log
This devise measure number of photon then be
related to electron density of the formation.
Electron density is related to an apparent bulk
density which equivalent to formation bulk density.
Useable to detect formation lithology.
29. Sonic or Acoustic Logs
Provide continuous record of the time taken in
microsecond/foot by sound wave to travel from the
transmitter to the receiver n the sonde.
Velocity of sound through a given formation is a
function of its lithological and porosity.
Dense, low porosity rocks are characterized by
high velocity of sound wave and vise-versa for
porous and less dense formation.
30. Logging While Drilling
One of the major drawbacks of wireline
information is that it is received several hours to
several weeks after the borehole is drilled.
During this time period, the formation can undergo
significant alteration, especially in its fluid
saturation, effective porosity, and relative perm.
LWD allow wireline-type information to be
available as near as real-time as possible.
Logging While Drilling (LWD) is a technique of
conveying well logging tools into the well borehole
downhole as part of the bottom hole assembly
(BHA).
31. Logging While Drilling
Some available measurement in LWD technology:
Gamma Ray
Resistivity
Density
Neutron
Sonic (fairly recent)
Formation pressure
Formation fluid sampler
Borehole caliper (Ultra sonic azimuthal caliper,
and density caliper).
32. Formation Testing
Is a means of obtaining information concerning the
liquid and pressure in an open-hole formations.
Three methods:
Wireline testing
Drill stem test (DST)
Well Test Analysis
33. Wireline Testing
Provide reservoir fluid samples, reservoir pressure,
an indication of fluid mobility and information on
reservoir continuity.
Two types: Repeat Formation Tester (RFT) and
Formation Interval Tester (FIT).
The RFT is run into the hole and a continuous
digital readout of hydrostatic pressure is obtained.
At any point in the hole the tool may be actuated
to force a rubber pad against the wall of the hole,
and a tube in the centre of the pad is forced hard
against the formation.
The formation fluid will flow to the chamber
through the tube.
34. Wireline Testing
The FIT is used for single test only one pressure
reading and one fluid sample for each run.
A tool is actuated (a pad is tightly against the
formation to form a seal against hydrostatic
pressure of the fluid in the hole).
A shaped charge is then fired into the fm, opening
a passageway for fm fluids to flow into a chamber
in the tool. At he same time the fm pressure will be
recorded.
35. Drillstem Test (DST)
A drill stem test (DST) is a procedure for isolating
and testing the surrounding geological formation
through the drill stem.
The test is a measurement of pressure behavior at
the drill stem and is a valuable way to obtain
important sampling information on the formation
fluid and to establish the probability of commercial
production.
The test is made by lowering a valve, a packer, and
a length of perforated tailpipe to the level of
formation.
The packer set against the wall of the borehole so
that it seals off the test interval from the mud
column above.
36. Drillstem Test (DST)
The valve is then opened, and
the fm fluid will flow to the
surface through the drillpipe.
The amount of fluid produced
will represent the fluid
production can be expected
from the well.
37. Well Test Analysis
Two types of testing: pressure build-up and draw
down test.
The primary objectives of well testing are to
establish:
Permeability thickness (Kh) and permeability (K)
Stratification (by sequential testing of layer).
Well productivity.
Investigate reservoir boundaries and size.
The amount of fluid produced will represent the
fluid production can be expected from the well.
38. Cased-hole Logging
Two major areas of cased-hole logging:
Production logging.
Reservoir monitoring.
Production logging refers to obtaining production
or injection profiles over a completed interval.
Reservoir monitoring refers to obtaining real time
information about changes in hydrocarbon
saturation.
Crucial for understanding water contact movement.
Other services include cement bond log which used
to evaluate the degree of isolation provided by the
casing cement.