Bitumen and heavy oil geochemistry: A tool for distinguishing barriers from baffles in oil sands reservoirs

被引:0
|
作者
Fustic M. [1 ,4 ]
Bennett B. [2 ]
Adams J. [3 ,5 ]
Huang H. [3 ]
MacFarlane B. [1 ]
Leckie D.A. [1 ]
Larter S. [3 ]
机构
[1] Nexen Inc., Calgary, AB T2P 3P7
[2] Gushor Inc., Calgary, AB T2A 5L7, Bay #2
[3] Department of Geoscience, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4
[4] Statoil Canada Ltd., Calgary, AB T2P 0H7
[5] ConocoPhillips, Houston, TX 77079-2197
关键词
D O I
10.2113/gscpgbull.59.4.295
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
To optimize SAGD well-pair placement and improve thermal recovery operations, geochemical bitumen composition logs are used to identify barriers and baffles to fluid flow, which may compartmentalize McMurray Formation reservoirs in the Athabasca Oil Sands. SAGD steam chamber growth and cumulative steam oil ratios are sensitive to both vertical permeability and bitumen viscosity variations, which are commonly encountered in the oil sands reservoirs. In the McMurray Formation, tidally influenced meandering channel deposits are commonly vertically stacked, forming reservoir columns up to 80 m thick. In many instances, inclined heterolithic strata (IHS), consisting of interbedded sand and silt deposited on point bars, comprise barriers to vertical steam chamber growth at multiple horizons of a reservoir. Thus, the identification, characterization, and delineation of IHS intervals is a critical step for evaluating the reservoir development potential, and designing an optimal reservoir development strategy. While siltstone beds are routinely identified in cores and geophysical logs, thin siltstone beds that can act as a barrier to fluid flow are not discernible in seismic reflection data and have proven difficult to correlate between adjacent delineation wells. In this study, geochemical bitumen analysis is used to determine the integrity and continuity of siltstone beds within IHS in order to assess their potential impact on SAGD steam chamber growth. First, high-resolution molecular composition profiles are obtained from gas chromatography - mass spectrometry analyses of bitumen extracted from cores. The continuity of biodegradation-susceptible aromatic hydrocarbon concentrations measured through vertical profiles of a reservoir were used to determine if siltstone-prone intervals observed in log and core data acted as barriers or baffles to fluid flow over geological time. Integration of the bitumen molecular composition data with geological cross-sections fosters predictions of the lateral extent of the identified barriers. Furthermore, inferences about reservoir charging and in-reservoir fluid mixing histories are also made. Geochemical log data indicate that thickness of a heterogeneous low permeability interval is not necessarily the critical attribute of a barrier to fluid flow. Integration of both sedimentological information and bitumen geochemical data is useful for the identification of barriers and baffles to fluid flow in oil sand reservoirs. The method can be applied prior to positioning of SAGD well-pairs and thus could represent an important step for development planning of heterogeneous reservoirs. © 2011 by the Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists.
引用
收藏
页码:295 / 316
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Recovery of Bitumen from Oil or Tar Sands Using Ionic Liquids
    Painter, Paul
    Williams, Phillip
    Mannebach, Ehren
    ENERGY & FUELS, 2010, 24 (02) : 1094 - 1098
  • [42] Investigation of Cavitating Jet Effect on Bitumen Separation from Oil Sands
    Bukharin, N.
    Vinogradov, O.
    Hugo, R.
    PETROLEUM SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2012, 30 (13) : 1317 - 1323
  • [43] Separation of bitumen from oil sands using a switchable hydrophilicity solvent
    Holland, Amy
    Wechsler, Dominik
    Patel, Anjali
    Molloy, Brian M.
    Boyd, Alaina R.
    Jessop, Philip G.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE CHIMIE, 2012, 90 (10): : 805 - 810
  • [44] Extraction of bitumen from oil sands with hot water and pressure cycles
    Hong, P. K. Andy
    Cha, Zhixiong
    Zhao, Xinyue
    Cheng, Chia-Jung
    Duyvesteyn, Willem
    FUEL PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY, 2013, 106 : 460 - 467
  • [45] Study of Bitumen Liberation from Oil Sands Ores by Online Visualization
    Srinivasa, Sundeep
    Flury, Chris
    Afacan, Artin
    Masliyah, Jacob
    Xu, Zhenghe
    ENERGY & FUELS, 2012, 26 (05) : 2883 - 2890
  • [46] THE USE OF SOLVENTS AND GASES WITH STEAM IN THE RECOVERY OF BITUMEN FROM OIL SANDS
    REDFORD, DA
    JOURNAL OF CANADIAN PETROLEUM TECHNOLOGY, 1982, 21 (01): : 45 - 53
  • [47] HEAVY OIL RECOVERY IN THE ALBERTA OIL SANDS.
    McIntyre, Hugh
    Engineering Journal (Montreal), 1976, 59 (01): : 61 - 65
  • [48] Process modelling and simulation of bitumen mining and recovery from oil sands
    Suvarna, Manu
    Divakaran, Mohanraj
    Nduagu, Experience, I
    MINERALS ENGINEERING, 2019, 134 : 65 - 76
  • [49] Ecotoxicological impacts of effluents generated by oil sands bitumen extraction and oil sands lixiviation on Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata
    Debenest, T.
    Turcotte, P.
    Gagne, F.
    Gagnon, C.
    Blaise, C.
    AQUATIC TOXICOLOGY, 2012, 112 : 83 - 91
  • [50] Co-processing of biofuels and heavy oil derived from oil sands
    Feng, Maoqi
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 255