A solid/fluid substitution scheme constrained by pore-scale numerical simulations

Estimating the effects of pore filling material on the elastic moduli or velocities of porous and fractured rocks attracts widespread attention. This effect can be modelled by a recently proposed triple-porosity scheme, which quantifies this effect from parameters of the pressure dependency of the e...

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Main Authors: Sun, Yongyang, Gurevich, Boris, Glubokovskikh, Stanislav, Lebedev, Maxim, Squelch, Andrew, Arns, Christoph, Guo, Junxin
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: OXFORD UNIV PRESS 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/79272
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author Sun, Yongyang
Gurevich, Boris
Glubokovskikh, Stanislav
Lebedev, Maxim
Squelch, Andrew
Arns, Christoph
Guo, Junxin
author_facet Sun, Yongyang
Gurevich, Boris
Glubokovskikh, Stanislav
Lebedev, Maxim
Squelch, Andrew
Arns, Christoph
Guo, Junxin
author_sort Sun, Yongyang
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Estimating the effects of pore filling material on the elastic moduli or velocities of porous and fractured rocks attracts widespread attention. This effect can be modelled by a recently proposed triple-porosity scheme, which quantifies this effect from parameters of the pressure dependency of the elastic properties of the dry rock. This scheme divides total porosity into three parts: compliant, intermediate and stiff. Each type of pores is assumed to be spheroidal and characterized by a single aspect ratio. However, the implementation of this model requires the asymptotic values of the elastic moduli at much higher pressures where only non-closable pores remain open. Those pressures are beyond the capacity of most rock physics laboratories and can even crush typical sandstone samples. Experimental data at such pressures are usually unavailable. To address this issue, we introduce pore-scale numerical simulations in conjunction with effective medium theories (EMT) to compute the asymptotic values directly from the microtomographic images. This workflow reduces the uncertainty of model predictions on the geometric information of stiff pores and strengthens the predictive power and usefulness of the model without any adjustable parameters. Applying this to a Bentheim sandstone fully filled with liquid and solid octadecane gives a reasonable match between model predictions and laboratory measurements. This success verifies the accuracy and applicability of the model and indicates its potential in further exploitation and characterization of heavy oil reservoirs and other similar reservoirs.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-792722020-08-04T03:41:06Z A solid/fluid substitution scheme constrained by pore-scale numerical simulations Sun, Yongyang Gurevich, Boris Glubokovskikh, Stanislav Lebedev, Maxim Squelch, Andrew Arns, Christoph Guo, Junxin Science & Technology Physical Sciences Geochemistry & Geophysics Acoustic properties Seismic attenuation Microstructure ELASTIC PROPERTIES MEDIA IMAGES ORIGIN ROCKS Estimating the effects of pore filling material on the elastic moduli or velocities of porous and fractured rocks attracts widespread attention. This effect can be modelled by a recently proposed triple-porosity scheme, which quantifies this effect from parameters of the pressure dependency of the elastic properties of the dry rock. This scheme divides total porosity into three parts: compliant, intermediate and stiff. Each type of pores is assumed to be spheroidal and characterized by a single aspect ratio. However, the implementation of this model requires the asymptotic values of the elastic moduli at much higher pressures where only non-closable pores remain open. Those pressures are beyond the capacity of most rock physics laboratories and can even crush typical sandstone samples. Experimental data at such pressures are usually unavailable. To address this issue, we introduce pore-scale numerical simulations in conjunction with effective medium theories (EMT) to compute the asymptotic values directly from the microtomographic images. This workflow reduces the uncertainty of model predictions on the geometric information of stiff pores and strengthens the predictive power and usefulness of the model without any adjustable parameters. Applying this to a Bentheim sandstone fully filled with liquid and solid octadecane gives a reasonable match between model predictions and laboratory measurements. This success verifies the accuracy and applicability of the model and indicates its potential in further exploitation and characterization of heavy oil reservoirs and other similar reservoirs. 2020 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/79272 10.1093/gji/ggz556 English OXFORD UNIV PRESS fulltext
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Geochemistry & Geophysics
Acoustic properties
Seismic attenuation
Microstructure
ELASTIC PROPERTIES
MEDIA
IMAGES
ORIGIN
ROCKS
Sun, Yongyang
Gurevich, Boris
Glubokovskikh, Stanislav
Lebedev, Maxim
Squelch, Andrew
Arns, Christoph
Guo, Junxin
A solid/fluid substitution scheme constrained by pore-scale numerical simulations
title A solid/fluid substitution scheme constrained by pore-scale numerical simulations
title_full A solid/fluid substitution scheme constrained by pore-scale numerical simulations
title_fullStr A solid/fluid substitution scheme constrained by pore-scale numerical simulations
title_full_unstemmed A solid/fluid substitution scheme constrained by pore-scale numerical simulations
title_short A solid/fluid substitution scheme constrained by pore-scale numerical simulations
title_sort solid/fluid substitution scheme constrained by pore-scale numerical simulations
topic Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Geochemistry & Geophysics
Acoustic properties
Seismic attenuation
Microstructure
ELASTIC PROPERTIES
MEDIA
IMAGES
ORIGIN
ROCKS
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/79272