© Distribution of this video is restricted by its owner
00:00 | and then go ahead and get And what we're going to do next |
|
|
00:06 | take the things that we've learned about mechanics and fracture mechanics and apply them |
|
|
00:12 | top seal failure. And first I to review some of the things that |
|
|
00:25 | talked about um in this block what what kind of fault are we |
|
|
00:30 | at? Normal? No fault. . With this side being footballer hanging |
|
|
00:54 | footfall going up here, hanging all . Good, perfect. And then |
|
|
01:04 | talked about this that the the fault thickness varies as a function of |
|
|
01:11 | It's not just a single line. actually has some fire with. And |
|
|
01:16 | can use that to estimate fault displacement from the thickness of the fault zone |
|
|
01:23 | we see in core. And then talked about the conservation of throw. |
|
|
01:34 | throw around these intersections needs to add to be consistent. So that if |
|
|
01:40 | have 200 ft here, You would to have 100 ft there and 100 |
|
|
01:46 | there. That the sum of these has to equal the total of |
|
|
01:52 | And depending on how the faults come here and here we have synthetic false |
|
|
02:00 | and here we have anesthetic fault. so you would if you go around |
|
|
02:08 | a different way, you would go 150 plus this 50 equals this 200 |
|
|
02:14 | here. Mm hmm. And so all our fault fault intersections that some |
|
|
02:19 | the throws has to be consistent. that can help us decide if we |
|
|
02:25 | the right event in some of these fault blocks when we do the sizing |
|
|
02:38 | . And then for the fractures. What? Mm hmm. Here we're |
|
|
02:46 | at joints. What are we what we looking at here fractures? |
|
|
02:57 | Beef bed parallel fractures? Yeah. here where we have these multiple sets |
|
|
03:03 | joints, um which what do we this one? And what do we |
|
|
03:10 | this one on A E. One, Y B E. |
|
|
03:22 | Two. Yeah, Perfect. And then along the joint surfaces like |
|
|
03:29 | , we see these promos features um indicate the direction of propagation of the |
|
|
03:38 | as it grows. So it grows following all these lines on the playlist |
|
|
03:47 | . Okay. And then we talked this that both the natural fractures and |
|
|
03:54 | fractures propagate parallel to Sigma one or H. Max. And so from |
|
|
04:02 | orientation of induced fractures or natural fractures this, we can infer what the |
|
|
04:09 | of signage max and signage men are what the optimum? Well, as |
|
|
04:17 | myth is for staging hydro fractures that want to be parallel two sigma three |
|
|
04:23 | get the most effective hydraulic fractures opening to sigma. H max sort of |
|
|
04:31 | parallel to signage from when the fracture to sigma h max. That's true |
|
|
04:37 | both natural fractures and hydraulic fractures. , so we'll go on now and |
|
|
04:46 | about top seal failure. We'll take things that we learned from two mechanics |
|
|
04:51 | apply them to the particular case of failure. Mhm. So here's here's |
|
|
05:00 | outline of what we're going to talk that. There are two top seal |
|
|
05:05 | mechanisms, capital reenter pressure and mechanical failure. This mechanical top seal failure |
|
|
05:12 | a natural hydraulic fracturing capillary entry pressure where the buoyancy pressure of the hydrocarbons |
|
|
05:20 | high enough that it can enter the space in the top seal. Mm |
|
|
05:25 | . Then we'll talk about the definition causes of fluid overpressure the fluid pressure |
|
|
05:33 | . And we'll spend a lot of talking about pressure depth plots and do |
|
|
05:37 | exercises along that. Hm. And we'll look at indications of mechanical top |
|
|
05:43 | failure where you see seats and things are indicative of topsail failure in your |
|
|
05:51 | trap. Ah We'll do some pressure exercises and then we'll look at some |
|
|
05:58 | of top seal limitations due to fluid or hydrocarbon column. Mhm. And |
|
|
06:05 | of the important points is that traps at autopsy of failure can still |
|
|
06:10 | hydrocarbons. And we'll look at a of examples of that. So if |
|
|
06:17 | total fluid pressure in the hydrocarbon column the topsail capacity. You can still |
|
|
06:25 | some hydrocarbons and it's kind of a equilibrium and then we'll talk about pressure |
|
|
06:32 | traps and um false seal failure that , critically stressed, false conceal and |
|
|
06:41 | is contrary to conventional industry wisdom. we'll look at some examples of ceiling |
|
|
06:48 | stressed false and then we'll do an with conversion factors from pressure depth |
|
|
06:59 | Okay, so schematic cross section of trap here um with our dip closure |
|
|
07:09 | , total column height from the crest to the spill point here. Total |
|
|
07:15 | depends on the dip closure and the dependent closure and what we're going to |
|
|
07:20 | talking about. And how are the seal failure mechanisms? Um Top seal |
|
|
07:27 | be limited by the capital's central pressure by mechanical fracture strength of the top |
|
|
07:33 | and the hydrocarbon buoyancy and fluid pressure the Minimum horizontal stress and cause hydraulic |
|
|
07:41 | there at the top two. So are the two potential limitations on our |
|
|
07:46 | capacity. Okay, so mechanical failure when the fluid pressure all right moves |
|
|
08:02 | stress circle to the left and intersects failure envelope. Either in shear fracture |
|
|
08:08 | tensile fracture mechanism here and this opens . Um This opens up joints or |
|
|
08:15 | fractures that then can allow the fluid escape. And so the ah one |
|
|
08:29 | the things we have to address is what is more likely to cause |
|
|
08:33 | What causes failure? 1st catholic central or hydraulic failure. So we talked |
|
|
08:40 | hydraulic failure as one of that fluid reduces your effective normal stress to a |
|
|
08:46 | value. Capt. Lory failure occurs the buoyancy pressure on showing a |
|
|
08:54 | you're of a couple of sand grains spacing between the sand grains by the |
|
|
09:00 | here, water here the reservoirs are water wet. And so capillary failure |
|
|
09:11 | when the buoyancy pressure of the hydrocarbons great enough to displace the water in |
|
|
09:17 | pore throats of of the topsail. this has, becomes a function of |
|
|
09:24 | buoyancy pressure. The inter facial which is a function of whether it's |
|
|
09:29 | or oil and the poor throat Alright, so this um we talked |
|
|
09:44 | this. The displacement pressure is proportional the inter facial tension, the cosign |
|
|
09:52 | this wedding angle and inversely proportional to poor throat radius. The so here's |
|
|
10:01 | we measured captain range of pressure. take a core plug like this and |
|
|
10:07 | it in a centrifuge like this which typically filled with mercury. And then |
|
|
10:15 | we spin that around to increase the on it until the mercury starts to |
|
|
10:22 | the pore space in the rock in core sample and record, we record |
|
|
10:29 | as mom, a series of crafts this where you're looking at the wedding |
|
|
10:37 | saturation. So this is the um is the the saturation of the water |
|
|
10:46 | the pore space as you spin this in the centrifuge and increase the |
|
|
10:54 | The pressure goes up following in line this until it starts to displace the |
|
|
10:59 | in the pore throats and then it over like this and um and continues |
|
|
11:06 | increase along a trajectory like this. inflection points represent the calculus reentry |
|
|
11:14 | Um In terms of mercury air caterpillar pressure for that particular sample. So |
|
|
11:22 | measure these things with mercury air Capital pressure and then we have to convert |
|
|
11:28 | two the Capital Metro pressures for Okay so this is a this is |
|
|
11:38 | history graham. Now. Different different of top seal here versus the mercury |
|
|
11:46 | capture Antrel pressure and the black bars are all deepwater gulf of Mexico shelter |
|
|
11:55 | and shales. Um The average capital pressure of all these samples is about |
|
|
12:04 | p. s. i. So tells us the mercury air calculate central |
|
|
12:10 | . You need to convert that to and gas capillary entry pressure. That's |
|
|
12:25 | . Okay so there are two steps want to do here. First we |
|
|
12:28 | to convert the mercury air capital of pressure to oil and gas, Capital |
|
|
12:33 | pressure and then convert those capital reentry to buoyancy pressures and column feet of |
|
|
12:41 | and gas. So that way we relate the topsail capacity to the hydrocarbon |
|
|
12:48 | that we have trapped below that Alright so this is a this is |
|
|
13:01 | nom a graph for converting that mercury catholic central pressure to oil and gas |
|
|
13:07 | central pressure. Okay and basically you at the measure capital to enter |
|
|
13:16 | Mhm. Yeah you look at the and pressure along here and extrapolate up |
|
|
13:28 | this line. Um to get the facial tension to calculate the oil and |
|
|
13:35 | capillary entry pressure. And this This from A reference in old paper in |
|
|
13:47 | paper by Showalter and I've added to a number of references that include all |
|
|
13:54 | information. So if you want to up on some of this, you |
|
|
13:57 | go into it in more detail from references. So if we if we |
|
|
14:08 | those conversions of mercury capital entra pressure oil and gas, capital entra |
|
|
14:15 | we get these hissed a grams where average shale capital under pressure for oil |
|
|
14:23 | about 300 sigh. Yeah. And average capital intra pressure for gas, |
|
|
14:31 | higher. It's about 1140. so the same rock can hold different |
|
|
14:40 | pressures. Then gas pressure is the rock can hold twice as much gas |
|
|
14:45 | and as oil pressure. And this this is this is counterintuitive because the |
|
|
14:53 | is actually lighter, mm hmm. because of the inter facial tension, |
|
|
14:59 | same rock can hold a greater gas and the buoyancy pressure. Okay, |
|
|
15:11 | we want to convert we want to these buoyancy pressures to column height, |
|
|
15:18 | is something we can measure directly in in our maps and cross sections. |
|
|
15:25 | to do that, we need to these these equations and what we're trying |
|
|
15:34 | taking this pressure difference and calculating the white, it corresponds to that pressure |
|
|
15:43 | . So for Yeah, for oil gas, this DELTA P equals the |
|
|
15:52 | height times the density of the water the density of the oil to get |
|
|
15:59 | oil column height. And for gas DELTA P equals the density of the |
|
|
16:06 | minus the density of gas to give the column height in gas to combine |
|
|
16:11 | feet for gas. So, if just invert this to sulfur, H |
|
|
16:16 | get these two equations and um solving for capillary entry pressure, the column |
|
|
16:26 | for oil Equals the capillary entry pressure oil. So the 300 c. |
|
|
16:33 | divided by 0.45 minus 0.3 C per to get the column height of oil |
|
|
16:40 | feet. Mhm. The top seal hold analogs loose the analogous leaf. |
|
|
16:46 | gas we saw for the gas column by dividing the capital intra pressure for |
|
|
16:52 | gas by um the density of the minus the density of gas to get |
|
|
16:59 | gas column height in feet that the seal can hold. Alright, |
|
|
17:13 | um assuming these values for water oil density and gas density, when |
|
|
17:21 | convert those buoyancy pressures to column we get these hissed a grams that |
|
|
17:27 | that the average max returnable oil column for shale is about 20 100 ft |
|
|
17:33 | oil, mm hmm. And it's to about 30 800 ft of |
|
|
17:39 | True. And as I mentioned, is this is counterintuitive because the gas |
|
|
17:44 | lighter to the oil. But the inter facial tension is greater than the |
|
|
17:52 | into facial tension. So the same has a much higher capital entra pressure |
|
|
17:58 | gas. And I think those for . Thanks. So even though the |
|
|
18:04 | is lighter is more buoyant, we retain a greater gas column white than |
|
|
18:10 | then an oil column point. And to most of our traps must the |
|
|
18:22 | height of total closure height of most our traps. These are pretty large |
|
|
18:28 | . You you'd be lucky you're lucky find a trap that can hold 20 |
|
|
18:34 | ft of of Closure or even 30 ft of closure. You can even |
|
|
18:39 | fortunate. Okay, okay. So I want to emphasize these ideas about |
|
|
18:49 | your disclosure and calm, right? , given this, given the sketch |
|
|
18:55 | , what is the total possible Mm hmm. 100 ft on what |
|
|
19:26 | did was I wait 700 ft. from the crest, 1 5000 to |
|
|
19:34 | oil water contact. 1 5 Well, that's the that's the total |
|
|
19:43 | column height, but the total closure actually greater. Goes from the crest |
|
|
19:50 | the way down to this. Still here at about Um 15,900. |
|
|
19:59 | Okay. Yeah, yeah. So important to understand this difference So that |
|
|
20:08 | total closure goes from the crest 1500 and 14,900 all the way down |
|
|
20:15 | the spill points, we have about ft of total possible closure. The |
|
|
20:22 | height. You calculated correctly from the here, down to this oil water |
|
|
20:31 | . So that's That's 700 or 800 depending on. But what you choose |
|
|
20:36 | from the crest in the difference indicates the trap is actually under filled relative |
|
|
20:44 | the total closure. But we could another 100 or 200 ft of columbine |
|
|
20:51 | here. Um, if we're going fill it up to this total still |
|
|
20:57 | , Okay, Now this gets this more complicated from that, from that |
|
|
21:05 | column height, we want to know is the buoyancy pressure of that |
|
|
21:11 | At the trust of the crest of trap? Right. To do |
|
|
21:15 | we assume these average density gradients of micro foot for water. 10.3 per |
|
|
21:26 | for oil. All right. And to calculate that point, see |
|
|
21:42 | We take that 800 ft call him and multiply at times the difference in |
|
|
21:50 | two density gradients. .455 -33 together the pressure for an oil column of |
|
|
21:59 | 124 c. Now, with that ft calm height and 124 points the |
|
|
22:12 | . What's the what's the risk of failure? How does this compare to |
|
|
22:16 | history grams that we just looked at top seals. For oil buoyancy |
|
|
22:28 | It should be pretty low. Pretty , Yeah. So, if I |
|
|
22:32 | at this history graham for top the average Of these retain herbal capital |
|
|
22:38 | intra pressures is 20 100 ft. so borrow What do we have? |
|
|
22:46 | ft 10 24 p. s. . So that's that's pretty low compared |
|
|
22:55 | the points he pressured required to equal the top seed capital central pressure. |
|
|
23:05 | , okay. And that's that's shown , where the points of pressure is |
|
|
23:11 | 124 C for this column? And the average topsail capacity for oil |
|
|
23:17 | about 300 c. So, we're little less than half of the average |
|
|
23:26 | capital central pressure for oil. good risk of feeling about Captain Andrew |
|
|
23:31 | is very low as Angela smith. . Alright, so that's capillary |
|
|
23:43 | Now, we're going to talk about top seal failure or natural hydrofracking. |
|
|
23:47 | right. And what we're what we're to here, what we mean by |
|
|
23:56 | topsail capacity is the poor pressure that the mechanical steel capacity, um causing |
|
|
24:06 | causing hydraulic fracturing of the top sale . So what is the poor pressure |
|
|
24:12 | required to drive that stress circle to right? To intersect the failure, |
|
|
24:19 | ? To the left, intersected And this is this is also referred |
|
|
24:23 | as topsy leica breached trap or a seal or a brown trap blown |
|
|
24:31 | And it happens when that poor pressure greater than the minimum horizontal stress. |
|
|
24:43 | , so what is what is over on? And I'm showing that here |
|
|
24:47 | this schematic the pressure dump diagram, water line would follow just a straight |
|
|
24:56 | like this representing just the weight of water column. So at any point |
|
|
25:02 | z here, the weight of the column would be some. It's relatively |
|
|
25:08 | pressure like this. Overpressure refers to the shift of that fluid pressure to |
|
|
25:17 | right, the magnitude of that shift the right. Mhm. So insert |
|
|
25:23 | total fluid pressure in this part of section equals the hydrostatic pressure plus the |
|
|
25:33 | . And this overpressure develops went typically over compassion when mm hmm. The |
|
|
25:45 | are deposited so rapidly with low permeability part of the weight of the |
|
|
25:52 | the load of the sentiments is transferred the rock matrix to the interstitial |
|
|
26:03 | Okay, there are multiple potential causes overpressure. This disequilibrium compaction that I |
|
|
26:10 | described from the rapid burial of impermeable is the most common. Um But |
|
|
26:18 | can also be generated by tectonic compression a roofing. And look at a |
|
|
26:25 | of examples of that. It can be caused by hydrocarbon generation. Aqua |
|
|
26:33 | expansion. So just the expansion of water duty heating up in the mineral |
|
|
26:39 | and mineral transformation reactions with. As increase heat in pressure, we transformed |
|
|
26:48 | clays and drive water dehydrate to clay's you drive water out of the clay |
|
|
26:54 | that contributes to over partnership then contributes overpressure generation. Mhm. You can |
|
|
27:04 | get over pressures from lateral transfer or transfer. Hydrocarbon pliancy pressure that will |
|
|
27:13 | about a lot. And in lateral transfer is an important mechanism where |
|
|
27:22 | , mm hmm two water gradient line the 00 point at a higher |
|
|
27:31 | Then then you're in your area of and we'll look at some examples of |
|
|
27:45 | . Okay, so the most common of open pressure is that this equilibrium |
|
|
27:50 | . And here I've got depth versus , grasp in depth versus ferocity. |
|
|
27:58 | the fluid can escape, the food follows this blue line is a function |
|
|
28:03 | debt. Mhm. The porosity follows blue line where the porosity continues to |
|
|
28:12 | with with increasing depth, you get over pressures when the ferocity doesn't decrease |
|
|
28:23 | with with increasing stress. So you're approaching kind of a no A minimum |
|
|
28:31 | of ferocity. That's non zero here this case about 20%. So when |
|
|
28:37 | bury these things rapidly to prosperity, fluids can escape across city doesn't decrease |
|
|
28:45 | overpressure develops within those workspaces and then weight of the rock column now is |
|
|
28:52 | by the poor pressure in addition to rock itself. Alright. And here |
|
|
29:02 | got two seismic sections. Their views the same seismic sections. So here's |
|
|
29:09 | typical from reflectivity section. And here have extracted the velocities for that |
|
|
29:19 | Mhm. Because the velocity is a of the compaction state, the ferocity |
|
|
29:25 | effective stress we can use the velocity calculate for pressure. Mhm. And |
|
|
29:32 | here, for example, here are the blue are slow velocities. The |
|
|
29:38 | are high velocities. They're shown by scale here as I go deeper here |
|
|
29:45 | my philosophies continue to Okay. In philosophies continued to increase and my fluid |
|
|
29:57 | is following basically a normal gradient here in this area. I have lower |
|
|
30:04 | expected velocities indicating that I have over . So when we have some actual |
|
|
30:11 | points, like any one of these , we can calibrate that relationship between |
|
|
30:18 | and overpressure and then use the velocities estimate what the over pressures are |
|
|
30:24 | In the unexplored sections of the Okay, so typically we have a |
|
|
30:38 | of different ways that we measure fluid besides velocities and one of the one |
|
|
30:46 | the most commonest mud weights. Because have a lot of mud weight data |
|
|
30:53 | and I'm shown here a pressure depth with a with a static gradient |
|
|
30:59 | the hydrostatic radiant here in the blue then individual mud waits shown here in |
|
|
31:06 | in all the circles, the whole whole reason for using mud in the |
|
|
31:11 | is to keep fluid from flowing into wellbore and housing a blowout. So |
|
|
31:18 | the mud way tree typically slightly greater the fluid pressure. So in this |
|
|
31:25 | case the fluid pressure is probably somewhere the bottom of this scattered data cloud |
|
|
31:34 | these mud ways are higher. Then actual poor fluid pressure in order to |
|
|
31:41 | that poor fluid pressure in the rock to keep it from flowing into the |
|
|
31:45 | and gust to blow up. Excuse . So this is one way we |
|
|
31:52 | can estimate fluid pressure. The other is from trail stamped, cast in |
|
|
32:02 | information, repeat formation, modular test a in a trial stand test shown |
|
|
32:10 | a schematic here where we're looking at world war, here's the rock, |
|
|
32:15 | here's the will board. Um Here's our modern line gauge. We insert |
|
|
32:24 | packer to close off the section that want to test and then open |
|
|
32:31 | open the valve here and let fluid the rock flow into the, into |
|
|
32:37 | drills, Manchester and then close, allow that pressure to stabilize, close |
|
|
32:43 | valve and record that pressure. And that gives us a direct measurement of |
|
|
32:49 | formation pressure in that interval of the door. We also have these |
|
|
33:04 | more sophisticated tools called R. T. S. A repeat formation |
|
|
33:09 | , a modular dynamic formation tester and and this is a slim bridge trademark |
|
|
33:16 | and then a formation multi tester which a mm hmm a general industry term |
|
|
33:23 | this type of tool. And what do is lower the tool on a |
|
|
33:30 | hmm. Lower the two on wire . So insert the probe into |
|
|
33:38 | into the mm hmm. You know borehole, allow the formation pressure to |
|
|
33:46 | up in this tool and collect a and measure the pressure of that |
|
|
33:53 | And this is this is nice because allows us to collect a sample as |
|
|
33:58 | as measures the pressure. So we if the pore space here is filled |
|
|
34:03 | water, oil or gas. Leadoff tests are another way to measure |
|
|
34:17 | the formation pressure and this is a of leak off test where this is |
|
|
34:24 | the volume or time versus versus And this is the pressure that's recorded |
|
|
34:31 | the on at the casing at the of the casing string. And typically |
|
|
34:41 | do this to make sure that mm . We have sufficient mud weight to |
|
|
34:47 | ahead without fracking the rock. Um anywhere a leak point anywhere along this |
|
|
34:58 | part of the curve is referred to a limit test or information integrity |
|
|
35:05 | If we allow the pressure to go to where it starts to go through |
|
|
35:10 | inflection. This inflection is measured as leak off pressure for the fresher opening |
|
|
35:19 | and this represents the pressure where the weight is actually starting to fracture the |
|
|
35:25 | and cause fractures to propagate away from world war. If we continue to |
|
|
35:32 | the pressure, the fraction will begin propagate rapidly to have unstable fracture |
|
|
35:41 | And now the fluid pressure is going drop again as those fractures open and |
|
|
35:47 | grow. And then at this point U. F. P. Is |
|
|
35:52 | ultimate fracture point or unstable fracture propagation . Mhm. And then if we |
|
|
36:02 | in the tool the pressure will drop we'll get these fractured closure pressures where |
|
|
36:11 | well is shut in now and the can close and reduce the pressure in |
|
|
36:17 | in in the subway car. And these these leak off pressures or information |
|
|
36:29 | fracture pressures. This point are most recorded as a Sigma three or our |
|
|
36:35 | age men. Um So here's an of a pressure depth thought pressure |
|
|
36:51 | depth here, for reference Lucas static here, about one cm per foot |
|
|
36:59 | gradient here about 0.45 P. I. Crow foot and all the |
|
|
37:06 | of leak off test data. The is here with each one of these |
|
|
37:10 | points representing an individual leak off So each one of these points |
|
|
37:20 | I quite like that in a week test friends. And then True, |
|
|
37:27 | of this cloud that represents the most estimate of the fracture gradient or the |
|
|
37:36 | horizontal stress. So, we can these leak off tests to estimate what |
|
|
37:44 | fracture grading of the minimum horizontal stress a function of depth. Ah So |
|
|
37:58 | there we got two things to this over pressured water pressure line here that |
|
|
38:07 | to the right from this hydrostatic So this represents my overpressure and a |
|
|
38:14 | pressure gradient here. Um Starting from free water level, the oil water |
|
|
38:22 | at a gas water contact migrating up that lower density for the hydrocarbons with |
|
|
38:29 | or gas. And when this hydrocarbon reaches the fracture gradient is when we |
|
|
38:39 | to open fractures in the top seal get mechanical topsail failure. Okay, |
|
|
38:51 | the top seal failure or natural hydrofracking when the fluid pressure gradients intersect the |
|
|
38:58 | gradient. And that could happen either , shallow or the water gradient intersects |
|
|
39:04 | leak off test cloud or intersects the gradient, I should say. Or |
|
|
39:09 | can happen deeper in the section where hydrocarbon pressure gradient intersects the um In |
|
|
39:15 | sense, the fracture gradient. And when this occurs, oh, |
|
|
39:24 | reached a sort of a dynamic The track can still hold this hydrocarbon |
|
|
39:30 | fight, but it can't hold So if more hydrocarbons bubbling in this |
|
|
39:37 | , hydrocarbons are going to bubble out top through the hydro fractures in the |
|
|
39:41 | of the track. So even though in hydraulic failure, we can still |
|
|
39:46 | hydrocarbons in this trap. Mhm. now that the the bottom of this |
|
|
40:00 | off. Test cloud this fresh You can see it's not exactly |
|
|
40:05 | It's kind of curvilinear increasing towards the gradient with increasing pressure and increasing |
|
|
40:14 | And that's that's an artifact of the mechanics. It has nothing to do |
|
|
40:19 | with the tectonic environment. So here got 1, 2, 3, |
|
|
40:24 | different basins. All of them are along normal faults settings. But we |
|
|
40:32 | that that the bottom of the league test cloud, that minimum horizontal stress |
|
|
40:39 | is curvilinear. It starts to curve towards the little static gradient with increasing |
|
|
40:45 | with increasing pressure and depth. We'll you in this space in you |
|
|
40:50 | we see it again in this space here. We see it again in |
|
|
40:56 | basin where we have just the leak test portrayed. And here we see |
|
|
41:01 | in the space and number four. we see it here Turning over in |
|
|
41:07 | of these two. It's nice. fracture gradient. It's nicely dividing the |
|
|
41:14 | off test data here from the measured pressure data here. So, this |
|
|
41:21 | gives us a good estimate. I minimum horizontal stress and the maximum fluid |
|
|
41:27 | that we could retain along this Mhm. Alright. So here are |
|
|
41:38 | indications of warning signs of mechanical topsy failure. Um something like this where |
|
|
41:45 | see but mud volcanoes, month mounds the along the sea floor. Mm |
|
|
41:53 | . Something like this where we have synthetic seeps growing along the sea floor |
|
|
41:58 | they're feeding on the oil that's coming through the top seal. Mhm. |
|
|
42:04 | see it in seismic vertical profiles with zones like this, often with a |
|
|
42:11 | volcano where we'll see at the sea at the top of that. I |
|
|
42:15 | so. So all these things are the underlying trap being at top seal |
|
|
42:29 | . Here's some other examples. This another seismic wipe out zone, a |
|
|
42:34 | sizing zone with a crater here at sea floor. Mhm. Here's the |
|
|
42:41 | C format alarm the surface. And see the event here with fall scarves |
|
|
42:50 | and here due to slumping from the coming up. This this feature pock |
|
|
42:56 | here at the bottom from fluid coming along along this zone. So, |
|
|
43:03 | you see these things in the seismic , that's an indication that you're trapped |
|
|
43:07 | everybody is down here is the autopsy film. Here's another example here is |
|
|
43:18 | , but sea floor bottom map again a scarf here, vents all along |
|
|
43:24 | looking sort of like a moon created . Um On one volcano here with |
|
|
43:31 | slumping off there. And all of features are indicates indicators of high fluid |
|
|
43:38 | in the underlying trap. This is example from the black sea where you |
|
|
43:46 | a big mud volcano at the sea here with a wipe out stone |
|
|
43:52 | Both of these features indicating that somewhere depth under here, there's a trap |
|
|
43:58 | a topsy of failure. Um now, as I mentioned when these |
|
|
44:11 | failed due to the hydrocarbon pressure reaching fracture gradient, they can still retain |
|
|
44:19 | . So this is a pressure depth for the trap that underlies these chemo |
|
|
44:25 | seeps. So the seats are telling that the track is that failure |
|
|
44:30 | The hydrocarbon pressure equals the fracture gradient fluids are escaping out to generate these |
|
|
44:38 | to result in these seeds. But you look at the pressure death |
|
|
44:43 | we see that even though the top the oil pressure column line here intersects |
|
|
44:48 | fracture gradient, but we're still retaining a 1500 ft oil column. So |
|
|
44:55 | is at the maximum topsail capacity. time a bubble of hydrocarbon comes in |
|
|
45:01 | bubble of hydro currents has to escape the top. Um but It's kind |
|
|
45:06 | a dynamic equilibrium where we still maintain column height of about 1500 ft. |
|
|
45:14 | hmm. This is another example. is from a A faulted four way |
|
|
45:21 | . This is the oil, the column here, shown in the red |
|
|
45:28 | the black or the contours um Blue where it's water wet red shows where |
|
|
45:35 | harder hydrocarbon spills oil theory and these the individual faults that cut through |
|
|
45:43 | This is the pressure depth graph for trial. Mhm. You see depth |
|
|
45:50 | versus pressure here. These circles represent week off test data. So that's |
|
|
45:57 | that's my fracture gradient. The green here and here represent oil pressure measurements |
|
|
46:05 | this oil column. And you see oil columns measurements go right up and |
|
|
46:11 | the fracture gradient. But we're still 1000 ft of oil column in this |
|
|
46:17 | . So again it's a dynamic equilibrium oil is escaping out the top, |
|
|
46:22 | we're still retaining A large column in case 1000 ft oil column. |
|
|
46:32 | Okay. Here's some natural examples of and geysers. Hello, these three |
|
|
46:40 | from southern Utah where there are a of C. 02 filled traps and |
|
|
46:46 | mentioned earlier that everything we talked about here refers to both CO two sequestration |
|
|
46:51 | oil and gas retention. And this an example where top so failure is |
|
|
46:57 | the amount of co two in these here where there's been a well bore |
|
|
47:03 | into it. You have a geyser Co. two and water emanating along |
|
|
47:08 | same fault zone elsewhere. It reaches surface. You have these seats of |
|
|
47:18 | . Two rich water for me calcite forming calcite and water along the fault |
|
|
47:26 | . Where this where the fault zone trapping the C. 02 goes under |
|
|
47:31 | green river, you actually get gas coming up into the into the river |
|
|
47:36 | where it goes across the false Um Mhm. The area around |
|
|
47:49 | A. Is just rife with natural seeps. The la brea tar pits |
|
|
47:56 | , for example of a natural oil where the there's an underlying trap that's |
|
|
48:01 | topsail failure and hydrocarbons are migrating up the surface. Um This is an |
|
|
48:09 | of seeps along the santa barbara And then again, this is where |
|
|
48:15 | are autopsy of failure and oil is through the hydro fractures up to the |
|
|
48:21 | surface. Mhm. And this is interesting example because in this case, |
|
|
48:27 | from offshore platforms, reduce the reservoir and actually reduced the seeps. And |
|
|
48:37 | here's going into more detail on Here's the, the santa barbara Channel |
|
|
48:44 | . Here's the coastline here. The outline here is this south Ellwood field |
|
|
48:52 | the red spots on here, or there are seats on the sea |
|
|
48:58 | Now, as a, as a of developing and producing this field, |
|
|
49:05 | operator are going this place was required place heap tense over some of these |
|
|
49:12 | to monitor the seat, which as produced the field to make sure they |
|
|
49:17 | causing more seats And what they found just the opposite that as they |
|
|
49:25 | they actually reduced the seed thought. here's a here's the craft of volume |
|
|
49:33 | gas per day trapped in those in tents. So that's what's trapped in |
|
|
49:40 | tents that they placed over these seeps you see that mm hmm. Thank |
|
|
49:49 | . Comes along at a fairly constant . There was some monkey business with |
|
|
49:53 | seat tent here that they had to for so they get this extrapolated line |
|
|
50:00 | extending through here And then starting in , the seepage started to decrease dramatically |
|
|
50:09 | this inset here is a graph of for pressure as a function of |
|
|
50:17 | And what you see is that as that restaurant pressure started to decrease About |
|
|
50:25 | in 1984. I mean by decrease significantly below hydrostatic Yeah. What |
|
|
50:36 | is that pressure, decrease the seat ? The natural seat which also naturally |
|
|
50:44 | . So in this case the the rather than causing more pollution, actually |
|
|
50:51 | oil seeps into the water around santa . And so I put this insight |
|
|
51:01 | show that as we, as we the pressure here, if we represent |
|
|
51:08 | in pressure, death space, we this oil gradient line away from the |
|
|
51:13 | gradient and reduce the conditions causing hydro and seat they chucked through the up |
|
|
51:19 | the fracture gradient here. Okay, hmm. Alright. So this was |
|
|
51:28 | of the, one of the exercises I gave you and I want you |
|
|
51:32 | take a minute and do this. And you can do it in power |
|
|
51:36 | on your screen or you can do estimated on my screen or do |
|
|
51:42 | You can sketch it on the power that I sent you. What I |
|
|
51:48 | you to do is draw a hydrostatic gradient, show an increase information pressure |
|
|
51:55 | the seal bed. So this is is the seal bed here? This |
|
|
52:00 | the sea floor or mud line, sea level is here at the top |
|
|
52:05 | the graph. And then um I you to add a minimum horizontal stress |
|
|
52:19 | considering you're in a normal fall of . All setting one. Oh and |
|
|
52:25 | label that below the seabed, mm . Assume that the formation pressures hydrostatic |
|
|
52:32 | this part of the section And that minimum horizontal stress gradient. Oh, |
|
|
52:38 | the minimum horizontal stress gradient is also fraction purity. So, draw 100 |
|
|
52:43 | water gradient. An over pressure gradient the seal bed. And overburdened gradient |
|
|
52:50 | gradient. And then a minimum horizontal gradient. Mhm. Mhm. |
|
|
52:57 | take take a few minutes and let know when you've well, when you |
|
|
53:01 | this. So, how's everybody You had a chance to work through |
|
|
64:40 | . Yeah, I see lots of head now. It's okay. So |
|
|
64:45 | let's talk it through. All so, the the hydrostatic water gradient |
|
|
64:54 | be just a linear gradient starting from origin here at sea level extending down |
|
|
65:01 | the bottom of the section in one straight line. Thanks, the over |
|
|
65:10 | gradient is going to be shifted to right of that hydrostatic line. The |
|
|
65:16 | of the over pressure gradient will be to that hydrostatic gradient. Mhm. |
|
|
65:23 | through the seal bed here, you'd some kind of linear or curvilinear line |
|
|
65:29 | the hydrostatic gradient at the top. the over pressure gradient at the |
|
|
65:38 | Mm hmm. Are you all with so far to go look? |
|
|
65:45 | Okay, good. And then the static gradient needs to start from the |
|
|
65:59 | line and go somewhere off to the like this. So now it's representing |
|
|
66:05 | weight of everything overlying it. So representing the weight of the water column |
|
|
66:12 | the weight of the mud column at mud line. It's the same as |
|
|
66:16 | hydrostatic radiant. They both represent the of the water car. But then |
|
|
66:22 | you add sediments and go deeper, starts to go off to the right |
|
|
66:25 | this. And lastly, the minimum stress gradient Should be about 60 year |
|
|
66:36 | 70% of the overburden gradient. Again from the mud line and following a |
|
|
66:43 | like this somewhere to the left of electrostatic gradient like that. Any questions |
|
|
66:54 | comments on that so far is Always gonna be 60 to 70 |
|
|
67:07 | No, no, it's not. Remember as we go, as we |
|
|
67:12 | deeper to higher pressures, it gets to the low hispanic line. So |
|
|
67:18 | starts out in the shallow section is 60-70%. But once you start to |
|
|
67:24 | the overburden it gets closer and closer becomes curved And up in approaches 90% |
|
|
67:32 | the electrostatic gradient. So it gets close to the little static radiant as |
|
|
67:37 | get deeper mm hmm. And in we usually approximated as a linear function |
|
|
67:49 | because it makes it easier to do . It's the lazy man's approach, |
|
|
67:59 | . Any other questions or comments with ? Mhm. And this this is |
|
|
68:07 | important thing to make sure that the in the minimum horizontal stress start out |
|
|
68:13 | that point at the mud line and the last part labeled the minimum horizontal |
|
|
68:33 | stress above and below the seal So here we're looking for the difference |
|
|
68:41 | of the minimum horizontal stress and the pressure. So we'll have two lines |
|
|
68:50 | here. One up here between the horizontal stress and the food pressure |
|
|
68:57 | which is hydrostatic. And then here the minimum horizontal stress and the over |
|
|
69:04 | . Online fun. And you can that as that overpressure line moves to |
|
|
69:10 | right. Is that over pressure That effect is tres gets smaller and |
|
|
69:27 | . Okay. Is everybody good with ? Because it's important to get these |
|
|
69:31 | of what we're gonna do next? . Let's see. We've been we've |
|
|
69:36 | going about an hour. Do you to take a break or do you |
|
|
69:39 | to go plow ahead? Take a . Take a break. Okay, |
|
|
69:46 | . It's a 10 minute break. back about five minutes off. |
|
|
69:54 | Thanks. Thanks for sticking with me coming back. Okay, so, |
|
|
70:02 | now we're gonna talk about how that in fluid pressure that we just sketched |
|
|
70:07 | hydraulic fracturing. And again, here's friendly, more cool and diagram showing |
|
|
70:15 | as you increase the fluid pressure, move those circles to the right until |
|
|
70:21 | intersect the failure envelope, particularly in tensile mode here. And that's when |
|
|
70:27 | generate these heightened national hydraulic fractures. , mm hmm. Okay, so |
|
|
70:37 | we're gonna relate these pressure depth profiles hydrocarbon accumulations away. So here we |
|
|
70:46 | the hydrostatic pregnant and oil gradient here and a fracture gradient here. Um |
|
|
70:54 | oil gradient here corresponds to this oil here in the cross section. |
|
|
71:05 | if I move that oil gradient or over pressure gradient far enough to the |
|
|
71:11 | to intersect the fracture gradient, then poor pressure equals the minimum horizontal |
|
|
71:17 | And I start to open natural hydraulic and leak off fluids from the reservoir |
|
|
71:23 | here. No, there's a series animations to show that. So there's |
|
|
71:34 | a small oil column, small oil there in my trap. Still large |
|
|
71:40 | stress between the oil gradient and the gradient as I increase that oil |
|
|
71:52 | that oil pressure gradient moves to the , the oil water contact moves down |
|
|
72:00 | trap fills up here and I start reduce the effect of stress between the |
|
|
72:06 | column at the crest of the trap the fracture gradient. Okay, |
|
|
72:14 | now, at this point my oil intersects the fracture gradient and I start |
|
|
72:20 | generate natural hydro fractures in the crest and cause fluids to leak off through |
|
|
72:26 | crest at this point. So now additional hydrocarbons can be added to the |
|
|
72:37 | . Any additional charge that comes in going to cause an equal volume to |
|
|
72:43 | out the crust of the trap. so the column height here and here |
|
|
72:49 | in a dynamic equilibrium with the fracture pressures. Sorry, All right |
|
|
73:00 | what we're going to do now is the aquifer gradient, the water pressure |
|
|
73:07 | here. So here everything is Now, I've applied a small amount |
|
|
73:14 | overpressure here and my trap is still to the spill point here. At |
|
|
73:23 | point I've increased my aquifer gradient I've increased the overpressure in war. |
|
|
73:31 | hydrocarbon gradient intersects the french gradient and I'm at the maximum mechanical topsail |
|
|
73:42 | So now the topsail capacity, it's to limit how much hydrocarbons I can |
|
|
73:47 | in there as I continue to increase overpressure further, I'm pinned at this |
|
|
73:56 | at the crest of the trap. so the oil water contact has to |
|
|
74:01 | up and the hydrocarbon column is trapped there becomes smaller. My column height |
|
|
74:08 | now limited by the mechanical seal capacity the overpressure. At this point |
|
|
74:18 | hydrocarbon gradient equals the fracture great or water gradient. My over pressure gradient |
|
|
74:25 | equals a fracture gradient. There is effective stress space space to put any |
|
|
74:31 | in there and my trap is completely it. The water pressure is completely |
|
|
74:38 | the mechanical seal capacity. And I put any more hydrocarbons in there. |
|
|
74:47 | as I as I increase that fluid , I reduced the amount of hydrocarbons |
|
|
74:53 | could fit in that trap until eventually all gone. I can't fit any |
|
|
74:57 | hydrocarbons in that trap. Okay, , so now we have a couple |
|
|
75:06 | these couple of examples. I want look at where the crest of the |
|
|
75:10 | . Is that the maximum top steel , but we're still retaining hydrocarbons. |
|
|
75:17 | This comes from the sheer waterfield in central North sea. Mm hmm. |
|
|
75:26 | reservoir is shown here in the upper and in pressure death space, there's |
|
|
75:35 | fracture gradient, there's my hydrocarbon there's my over pressured aquifer gradient. |
|
|
75:42 | so based on the pressures. This right at the topsail capacity, but |
|
|
75:49 | still retaining 12 3000 feet of Despite being at the week off point |
|
|
75:59 | and again, this is the dynamic where any more charge that comes in |
|
|
76:03 | to be compensated by a charge being at the top. Okay, now |
|
|
76:15 | want to talk about what we call traps and these are traps that are |
|
|
76:20 | to a weak point. So, definition of protected trap is one that's |
|
|
76:25 | to a weak point and that's shown cross section on the right here, |
|
|
76:30 | I have a higher combination here. secondary culmination here, that's retaining oil |
|
|
76:39 | , mm hmm. The pore pressure modulated by the crest of the trap |
|
|
76:46 | . Where at this point the pore equals the fracture gradient in pressure. |
|
|
76:50 | space. That's at this point So my over pressure gradient equals my |
|
|
76:56 | gradient. But as I go deeper into the section, as I go |
|
|
77:02 | into the reservoir, I have more stress space here between the overpressure and |
|
|
77:08 | minimum horizontal gradient that I can start put in some hydrocarbons in here. |
|
|
77:14 | this is what we call a protected where the oil in this accumulation is |
|
|
77:19 | from top seal failure by this higher that allows the reservoir pressure to leak |
|
|
77:25 | and modulate the reservoir pressure. And is an example from the gulf of |
|
|
77:35 | . This is from the mars field the gulf of Mexico. You see |
|
|
77:40 | the mars fields over here with two sands, the scarlet and the pink |
|
|
77:45 | here, and these are over But if they if I follow that |
|
|
77:52 | , those reservoirs up to this You see, I've got a leak |
|
|
77:58 | point here, I've gotta wipe out in the seismic in this point, |
|
|
78:03 | modulates the water pressure in those two . So as I go back down |
|
|
78:10 | over the MArs field, I come here and I have effective stress space |
|
|
78:15 | I can begin to retain calm hydrocarbons the fracture gradient and the aquifer |
|
|
78:26 | Um And this this gets to the that often it's it's better to explore |
|
|
78:36 | subregional high point than the actual apex . We're looking at a series of |
|
|
78:43 | in a toe thrust fold where I the highest point here and then secondary |
|
|
78:50 | is here and here and here and here while separated by these saddles from |
|
|
78:57 | point. So um we were seeing this kind of scenario. Long |
|
|
79:06 | We're at that apex. I can the water pressure and retain effective stress |
|
|
79:14 | deeper in the cards and maintain traps strike in there so that the high |
|
|
79:24 | can't retain any hydrocarbons. But that's create protected traps in these other combinations |
|
|
79:32 | there's enough effective stress between the water off this point and the effect of |
|
|
79:38 | gradient to maintain an oil column in other secondary structures. Mhm. |
|
|
79:50 | so I gave you this as an . Um I have a a schematic |
|
|
79:57 | section here and a pressure depth schematic here. What I want you to |
|
|
80:04 | is on the pressure depth diagram, a aesthetic gradient in a fracture gradient |
|
|
80:12 | then draw a reservoir of water pressure , assuming the waterline hits the fracture |
|
|
80:19 | at this crest, warn. And between these two red lines draw a |
|
|
80:27 | pressure gradient um to represent the pressure the trap here and then we'll talk |
|
|
80:35 | if the hydrocarbon gradient hits the fracture in the diagram will the hydrocarbons only |
|
|
80:41 | . Mhm. So you have this that it's a handout or as a |
|
|
80:45 | point? Um Take a few minutes draw the these gradients that have asked |
|
|
80:52 | try and just let me know when when you've completed the exercise and we'll |
|
|
81:01 | about it. Excuse me, Um The reservoir. What's up |
|
|
81:56 | Is it the overpressure line? It it will be an overpressure line. |
|
|
88:15 | . Okay. Should we go ahead talk this one through? Yes, |
|
|
88:26 | . All right. So you're the static gradient and the fragile gradient should |
|
|
88:31 | something like this. More or less slope in the position are not really |
|
|
88:37 | . You just what's critical is that electrostatic gradient is to the right of |
|
|
88:42 | fracture gradient, and the fracture gradient he is close to the pressure |
|
|
88:48 | but somewhere to the left of Now, the reservoir water gradient is |
|
|
88:57 | more constrained than that. So, we've defined this as a protected |
|
|
89:03 | that water gradient needs to take off the fracture gradient right here at this |
|
|
89:11 | in the exact slope. It doesn't it doesn't matter. But that that |
|
|
89:17 | should be nailed. Thank you. , my hydrocarbon gradient should extend from |
|
|
89:28 | little water contact. Start from the line here on the water contact and |
|
|
89:35 | up at some slope less than the gradient until you get the top after |
|
|
89:42 | top of crest to over here. the these these two elements. This |
|
|
89:49 | is fixed. This elevation is fixed the slope can be variable in between |
|
|
89:56 | . All right, okay. if I draw that slope so that |
|
|
90:06 | hit the fracture gradient from will the week off completely. No, they |
|
|
90:14 | . That's the dynamic equilibrium that I . That is more hydrocarbons come into |
|
|
90:18 | trap, an equal volume has to out the top but you still retain |
|
|
90:24 | oil column in there. So even you're at the fracture gradient, you |
|
|
90:28 | have a crucible retained oil column in . And he any comments or questions |
|
|
90:40 | this so far with, can you explain why the hydrocarbons won't leak off |
|
|
90:48 | ? Even the gradient that is the . Yeah, it becomes a |
|
|
90:55 | it becomes a dynamic equilibrium. So I um if I leak off hydrocarbons |
|
|
91:03 | , then that's going to move this to the left and now I have |
|
|
91:09 | space actually is going to move this down and I have more effective stress |
|
|
91:14 | to put more hydrocarbons in there. , so or alternatively a way to |
|
|
91:23 | of it as once you hydrofracking top influence, escape, you reduce this |
|
|
91:29 | point and the fractures seal up again so you you regain the retention |
|
|
91:44 | Okay, now this is um, emphasize this before that. These are |
|
|
91:56 | evidence of a of of a blonde . But when you have this |
|
|
92:03 | the seismic wipe out zones, disturbed , events and scarfs at the surface |
|
|
92:09 | tarts. Do they indicate the presence hydrocarbons in the underlying trap or |
|
|
92:20 | That it indicates that there's hydrocarbons or they're escaping? It doesn't really tell |
|
|
92:30 | whether you've got hydrocarbons or not If go back to um I guess |
|
|
92:44 | Go away. So in both of instances I'll have expulsion features like that |
|
|
92:59 | at the surface or in the overlying data. Thank you. But I'll |
|
|
93:04 | the same features whether I have um escaping or hydrocarbon escaping and I can |
|
|
93:12 | water escaping without any hydrocarbons. Let's I just I don't have a I |
|
|
93:20 | have a trap here. I could just hide her current. And so |
|
|
93:26 | the presence of those expulsion features. me I have this or I have |
|
|
93:32 | but it doesn't tell me which of two I have. So is that |
|
|
93:47 | that clear? Is everybody okay with ? No. The silk capacity of |
|
|
94:01 | has become an important topic with some the players in the gulf of Mexico |
|
|
94:07 | . And if we go over to mom, there's a lot of data |
|
|
94:13 | that shows that. Mhm. In section we have salt. The salt |
|
|
94:20 | you have the salts here sediments in . So it's very much like the |
|
|
94:26 | of Mexico many basins. And then the salt, we have these carbonate |
|
|
94:32 | that contains hydrocarbons. Um In the only limit on the retention in these |
|
|
94:42 | stringers is the seal capacity of the . And when we look at the |
|
|
94:48 | in those carbonate stringers, they're limited the frack, created the minimum horizontal |
|
|
94:56 | . And so the silk capacity of salt is the same as the fracture |
|
|
95:02 | or the minimum horizontal stress gradient. . And this is the this is |
|
|
95:12 | pressure data showing that. So here's our project leak off trend. I |
|
|
95:18 | leadoff trend and here are different hydrocarbon inclusions in the oil reservoirs, mm |
|
|
95:29 | . And they are all topped out this minimum leak off. Test grading |
|
|
95:35 | this minimum horizontal stress and so it the minimum minimum horizontal stress. That |
|
|
95:43 | the sealed capacity in these oil reservoirs the stringers encased in the salt. |
|
|
96:03 | . Um so that becomes important for sub salt play in the gulf of |
|
|
96:14 | now where we have these Reservoir beds up into three way closures against the |
|
|
96:22 | of the salt. Sure. And industry these are referred to as mega |
|
|
96:28 | , wow. Where these beds have pulled up by the salt extruding up |
|
|
96:34 | here and then out into a So the only limit on these traps |
|
|
96:41 | the seal capacity of the salt. it's the sealed capacity of the salt |
|
|
96:50 | is equal to the minimum horizontal stress . Yeah, there was a is |
|
|
97:08 | clear the the sealed capacity here? , limited by the salt and by |
|
|
97:14 | minimum horizontal stress. No, we also have top seal failure related to |
|
|
97:32 | . So here's a here's a cross from offshore Gambia, depart Gambia from |
|
|
97:40 | shown here in the in the tank , um and then a mix of |
|
|
97:49 | and shale shown here in the dark color. The reservoir objective is just |
|
|
97:57 | that, right in right in mm hmm. And in these |
|
|
98:04 | they are at there is stable pressure . They're stable Topsfield pressure today. |
|
|
98:14 | in the Miocene these channels, they the overlying sediment. So there's there's |
|
|
98:22 | floor, there's the base of one , there's the base of another |
|
|
98:27 | There's the basically the third channel, this channel ization, remove the overburden |
|
|
98:35 | these traps, reducing the vertical stress the mineral horizontal stress and causing the |
|
|
98:42 | too to feel. So this shows pressure depth data for that trap pressure |
|
|
98:55 | , depth here, all the leak test data here. Um rough fracture |
|
|
99:01 | here in the black dashed line. this is the this is the hydrocarbon |
|
|
99:09 | with the water gradient at present All right. When what happened with |
|
|
99:15 | examination is that we reduced the burial and in effect we moved this column |
|
|
99:22 | to here where it intersected the french gradient and in this case about half |
|
|
99:28 | the hydrocarbon column leapt off before it buried back down to here. |
|
|
99:34 | And so this is an example where get topsail failure due to exclamation, |
|
|
99:40 | the overburden, reducing the with a stress and the minimum horizontal stress do |
|
|
99:48 | have over the top of the Okay. Thoughts on mechanical failure, |
|
|
100:01 | of fault zones occurs under the same as top. Seo mechanical failure. |
|
|
100:07 | uh the idea that active, critically false leak is just, it's not |
|
|
100:14 | . And this is some become industry wisdom based on some papers by Mark |
|
|
100:20 | and his students out of stanford and just incorrect and it's incorrect because we |
|
|
100:30 | lots of examples of active faults that still retaining hydrocarbons and by active or |
|
|
100:39 | stress fault. We mean that the circle intersects the fracture gradient, causing |
|
|
100:47 | failure along the bounding faults, but that does not cause leakage. And |
|
|
100:54 | are two examples. This is from cusiana field in onshore Colombia. The |
|
|
101:02 | is down here where the gas cap an oil column here, it's sealed |
|
|
101:07 | this cusiana thrust here. And even this threat, this thrust is so |
|
|
101:16 | that the well wars only last about months before they're sheared off by the |
|
|
101:21 | faulting. Um, and, and We still retain a three billion barrels |
|
|
101:30 | amount of hydrocarbons in this field. this is an example of an active |
|
|
101:35 | fault and ceiling. This is an of an active normal fault. That |
|
|
101:41 | . This comes from the Eugene Island 30 field or posie fields in the |
|
|
101:45 | of Mexico. You see the fault , the reservoirs extending up to the |
|
|
101:52 | . So they're from trapped, trapped part by the fault, even though |
|
|
101:57 | faults are active. And so these faults Sealed pressures up to 300 C |
|
|
102:05 | these adjacent reservoirs. So even though active, they're sealing large pressures and |
|
|
102:11 | hydrocarbon columns. Now in the upper here is that the plot, that |
|
|
102:20 | the basis for this idea that critically false leak. And this is a |
|
|
102:26 | of odd plot. It's effective normal here versus shear stress here. So |
|
|
102:32 | similar to the more corn plot, hmm. And then these two bloodlines |
|
|
102:41 | the range of practical feel your These represent the range of possible more |
|
|
102:48 | envelopes around here With a mewling little interview legal .6. The different color |
|
|
102:58 | here represent different reservoirs where the dots open is where they're sealed and where |
|
|
103:07 | solid fills along here is where they're leaking and they're divided approximately by |
|
|
103:16 | Feel your envelope line. And so that sobek Adele concluded that the were |
|
|
103:24 | faults are critically stressed or where they critically stressed or active. They're |
|
|
103:31 | Whereas where they're not critically stressed where stress state doesn't intersect the failure |
|
|
103:38 | they're not leaking. Mhm. In for you, important point underlying this |
|
|
103:46 | that these these wells were drilled in rocks in basalt and granite. And |
|
|
103:56 | measure the fluid they had to leave gentle ease of World War open run |
|
|
104:02 | drill stem test for three months. these are leaking. But the rates |
|
|
104:09 | which they're leaking are incredibly small. effective permeability from those well tests Is |
|
|
104:16 | the order of 10 of the -3 10 to the -6 million dark |
|
|
104:21 | So there, yes, they're leaking the seal capacity is equivalent to a |
|
|
104:29 | or a shale topsail. So in in real life, we can have |
|
|
104:36 | active faults trapping large pressures and hydrocarbon . This is another example of an |
|
|
104:47 | ceiling fault. This is from but big board feels will be a psalm |
|
|
104:51 | in India. You see the naga coming up here and again. This |
|
|
104:56 | an active thrust today. And the are shown here in the white pattern |
|
|
105:03 | oil water contact extending several 100 m here, but deeper than the thrust |
|
|
105:11 | off here, showing that we've got ceiling, the ceiling thrust fault trapping |
|
|
105:18 | oil columns in the hanging wall So even though it's active, it |
|
|
105:22 | to seal all right. And so is this is a paper that I |
|
|
105:32 | some others published on C. 2 Traps. And what causes the |
|
|
105:38 | along the fault zones in the And those traps come from southern Utah |
|
|
105:47 | the Paradox basin here, um in in this part of the paradox |
|
|
105:54 | there are hydrocarbon accumulations and there are ceo to accumulations of all these |
|
|
106:00 | Well let's just show up active oil gas fields. And in the middle |
|
|
106:06 | the basin here We have these hydrocarbon . 0. 2. So you're |
|
|
106:12 | trapped accumulations. This is this is example of one of them. This |
|
|
106:18 | originally drilled as an oil trap and to contain C. 02. This |
|
|
106:23 | the wellbore from that original World Alright, so this is a three |
|
|
106:35 | . View of the CO two This is a structured contour map on |
|
|
106:40 | horizon. We have an antique line off to the northwest here With Co |
|
|
106:47 | accumulations here. On the upside of CO. Two water contact in here |
|
|
106:57 | the up thrown side of this co water contact and all along these |
|
|
107:04 | we get C. 02 geysers seeps springs along the surface traces of the |
|
|
107:10 | . This is this is an example one of the geysers that occurs along |
|
|
107:15 | fault. This is an example I where this fault goes under the green |
|
|
107:21 | And you get the co. two in the water where the fault is |
|
|
107:25 | CO two to the surface and these are completely inactive. They're completely |
|
|
107:36 | Right. But what's causing the leakage the high fluid pressure. So here |
|
|
107:42 | have pressure depth grass for 5. of the linkage sites in one of |
|
|
107:49 | non making sites. So here's my static gradient. There's my my fracture |
|
|
107:58 | , there's my water gradient, My . Two water contact and the |
|
|
108:04 | 02 pressure line extending up to where hits the freshman radio and causes |
|
|
108:12 | Similarly, if this accumulation got the godin gradient fracture gradient, the water |
|
|
108:20 | , the CO two gradient growing up the CO. Two contact here, |
|
|
108:24 | the fracture gradient and causing leakage at point. This other woodside geysers. |
|
|
108:32 | story with the star ingredient fracture Water gradient. Co two gradient extending |
|
|
108:39 | . Getting a fracture gradient causing leakage the fault zone up to the top |
|
|
108:45 | . Yeah, same thing for these other accumulations bubbling spring and 10 mile |
|
|
108:53 | , wherever the leakage occurs, wherever CO two gradients hit the fresh ingredient |
|
|
108:58 | in here. Now we also have in Fernando the pressure depth grab from |
|
|
109:06 | non leaking C. 02 accumulation. , there's my fracture experience. There's |
|
|
109:12 | fraction with a static radiant and black radiant in red Water gradient in blue |
|
|
109:18 | then the co two gradient. We here in green. So here is |
|
|
109:23 | the weekend. I have a very effective stress retained between This year two |
|
|
109:30 | the minimum horizontal stress fracture gradient. . Very different than all these other |
|
|
109:37 | where the effect of stress is zero the crest of all these traps. |
|
|
109:42 | . And so there. The conditions week. Ege of the fault |
|
|
109:48 | Is the same. Is it the for false songs as for top seal |
|
|
109:54 | . And the leakage conditions for 2 traps is the same as for |
|
|
109:58 | and gas traps. Alright, here's some other examples of leakage occurring |
|
|
110:09 | the fault zones where it occurred by injection, raising the reservoir pressure. |
|
|
110:19 | is from an example of northwest The platforms here and here we're injecting |
|
|
110:28 | into the reservoir. And after several of injection they started bubbling hydrocarbons out |
|
|
110:38 | of the reservoir at this point. that occurred because again they increase with |
|
|
110:45 | injection they increased that fluid pressure to the fracture gradient. This is an |
|
|
110:52 | from deepwater offshore brazil where we have fault extending to the sea floor and |
|
|
111:00 | this case oil oil emanating up from from that fall from the sea floor |
|
|
111:08 | again in this case the there was water injection occurring that raise the risk |
|
|
111:15 | pressure to intersect the fracture gradient and the hydrocarbons to be expelled along at |
|
|
111:24 | . Okay. All right. I gave you these conversion factors in |
|
|
111:34 | . They're important for being able to mud weighs and confront those mud ways |
|
|
111:40 | pressures. All right. But so gave you I think I included this |
|
|
111:47 | an exercise. Yes or no? . Okay. Mhm. So take |
|
|
111:57 | few minutes and and and go through . Take this information. The kelly |
|
|
112:04 | the water depth leak off. Test information integrity test data both in pounds |
|
|
112:11 | gallon. And what I want you do is convert those pounds per gallon |
|
|
112:18 | to P. S. I. the formulas to do that are given |
|
|
112:27 | in here. So go ahead let's why don't we take 2020 minutes take |
|
|
112:39 | time to to do these calculations and take a break And we'll come back |
|
|
112:46 | 20 minutes and talk about the Okay let's go ahead and talk through |
|
|
113:14 | exercise aren't. This is important because shown here is a daily drilling report |
|
|
113:20 | typically how all the information is reported we then use in these pressure depth |
|
|
113:25 | to calculate um you know week off and gradients and all that good stuff |
|
|
113:31 | we've just been doing. Okay So to get the depth and people and |
|
|
113:48 | line for the L. A. . And the F. Eight |
|
|
113:52 | I. T. You want to the total depth subtract the water depth |
|
|
113:59 | the kelly pushing. So for the . O. T. It's 6 |
|
|
114:04 | : 2 -1054 -35. For the the information integrity test it's the total |
|
|
114:15 | KB 10 406 minus the water depth the kelly pushing again. So it |
|
|
114:22 | out to 1046 -1054 miles 35 And that that often trips people |
|
|
114:32 | Is that clear to everybody? Yes . I have a question sir. |
|
|
114:39 | . So my question is on the total debt. Yes the deaths in |
|
|
114:45 | P. S. A. So do we have to add the |
|
|
114:49 | from the calibration to that? Oh . So um yeah from for both |
|
|
114:58 | these of the end for the No for the yeah both both of |
|
|
115:06 | are depth from the kelly bushing. so after the calibration the debt. |
|
|
115:12 | . Yeah thank you. So you the depth below the mud line for |
|
|
115:15 | of these. You need to subtract of these numbers. Okay. Okay |
|
|
115:23 | then for the and then for the um You convert the mud wage 13.1 |
|
|
115:34 | 13.2 To see using this conversion factor .052. And then you multiply that |
|
|
115:46 | the times the depth and subtract the of the water column. And for |
|
|
115:56 | of these that's The .443 months Times . The water density times the water |
|
|
116:05 | gives you the weight of the water . And by subtracting that way to |
|
|
116:09 | water column you get the you get pressure relative to a depth of one |
|
|
116:16 | . So you subtracted the weight of water column from those two pressures. |
|
|
116:28 | . Yeah for the M. T. It's a little different because |
|
|
116:33 | have to you have to pressure measurements but your depths our feet some speak |
|
|
116:41 | to correct these defeat Balon bloodline. of track just the 1054. So |
|
|
116:48 | the depth feeds up c minus just water depth. And then to get |
|
|
116:57 | these pressures to pressure below the mud . You take the pressures and subtract |
|
|
117:03 | weight of the water comb .443 times to get these these numbers. |
|
|
117:16 | Okay comments or questions on that. . All right we'll go ahead. |
|
|
117:34 | okay and in what we do it's to convert all those data to depth |
|
|
117:44 | for um to to compare steps from to compare data from fields with different |
|
|
117:55 | . Mhm. And for to assess connectivity. You need to calculate everything |
|
|
118:02 | to a subsea data. To calculate men we need to look at a |
|
|
118:10 | of black and white line data. depending on what we're doing we may |
|
|
118:14 | to use a subsidy data or a one month line data. Okay and |
|
|
118:24 | and the reason for that is that leak off pressure increases from the sea |
|
|
118:31 | . Whereas the poor fluid pressure increases sea level. So when we want |
|
|
118:35 | look at the fracture data we need normalize the leak off pressures to mud |
|
|
118:43 | both the depths and the pressures. evaluate fluid pressure. We need to |
|
|
118:51 | at everything relative to sea level and we need to make sure that we |
|
|
118:59 | both depth and the pressures. We the same data. So for like |
|
|
119:08 | for these two fields, if we at everything in a subsea view data |
|
|
119:15 | the reservoir pressures line up with the off test data fall into different |
|
|
119:25 | I'm so for reservoir connectivity we need use the sub c reference for ah |
|
|
119:37 | minimum horizontal stress and overburden calculations. need to use the death blow mud |
|
|
119:44 | reference. So depth below the mud for the X. Axis, Impressionable |
|
|
119:48 | one line for the Y. When we do that, all these |
|
|
119:53 | off points will line up into one that enables us to calculate the minimum |
|
|
119:59 | effective stress. Sure. And when looking at depth below my line of |
|
|
120:09 | below my line we have to make we use the corresponding step below them |
|
|
120:15 | or pressure below online data. But and this must be people on one |
|
|
120:20 | . Both this and this must be obscene. Okay, so to summarize |
|
|
120:34 | pressure data section to calculate pressure for weight data, the height of the |
|
|
120:40 | column should be used. Um And applies to leak off pressure data reported |
|
|
120:45 | mud weight like we just saw in scout ticket gradients are going to vary |
|
|
120:51 | on the reference level. So the will vary depending on whether you use |
|
|
120:56 | subsidy or a mud line data model columns of a constant gradient will have |
|
|
121:05 | sub secret agents at different depths to connectivity between wells data should be plotted |
|
|
121:12 | depths of C to assess vertical, stress and leak off pressure or minimum |
|
|
121:19 | stress in different wells. It should plotted in depth below the mud line |
|
|
121:23 | preferable or mud line and never don't confuse the mud line and the subsea |
|
|
121:31 | diatoms. So the summary for this , mechanical seal capacity is expressed as |
|
|
121:42 | hydrocarbon column height, a truck and before the top seal hydraulically fields or |
|
|
121:49 | by financial hydro fracturing traps. The failure due to hydrocarbons can still retain |
|
|
122:00 | . We looked at those examples where were at failure, but they still |
|
|
122:04 | thousands of feet of hydrocarbons protected traps those traps that are hydraulically connected to |
|
|
122:10 | weak point such that the pressure is and modulated and the aquifer pressure will |
|
|
122:17 | exceed the local topsoil capacity, critically faults concealed, so even though faults |
|
|
122:24 | be active today, they can still large pressures and column heights, leakage |
|
|
122:31 | thoughts occurs where the total food pressure the fracture gradient. It doesn't occur |
|
|
122:36 | the faults are active. It does where the total fluid pressure equals a |
|
|
122:41 | gradient, just like tom seal failure this is true for both hydrocarbons and |
|
|
122:50 | and that mechanical seal capacity is important traps that are, it's shallow depth |
|
|
122:55 | bloodlines. So there's not much overburden hard over pressured settings where the aquifer |
|
|
123:02 | pressure is getting close to the fracture , its subregional structural height so that |
|
|
123:09 | apex is that I showed you earlier a trend of full separated by |
|
|
123:17 | And they're important for a fluid expulsion . Like a seismic wipeouts is observed |
|
|
123:22 | the seismic data on the sea floor the surface and these expulsions owns or |
|
|
123:28 | see those whether you have hydrocarbons or . So you get the same expulsion |
|
|
123:37 | , whether it's due to overpressure dwyer due to overpressure hydro currents. |
|
|
123:47 | All right. So that's that's what want to stop for today. |
|
|
123:53 | We're early again. We went through much faster than I expected. We'll |
|
|
123:58 | again next friday, Same place. the same zoom link that we used |
|
|
124:03 | friday and we'll talk about riffs and growth falls and do a review of |
|
|
124:11 | for the midterm. And then up saturday we'll start with the midterm first |
|
|
124:18 | in the morning and then going to about false fields and salt tectonics and |
|
|
124:23 | to talk about full thrust belts, you have a question I'm regarding the |
|
|
124:31 | . Are we going to have a guide like we do for the final |
|
|
124:37 | . Um Well, yeah, just . Just before the exam will have |
|
|
124:44 | review presentation and that will be that be your study guide. The the |
|
|
124:51 | tests will come pretty much directly from midterm review slides. Is that gonna |
|
|
124:58 | posted on blackboard? The review was on blackboard. Yes I didn't see |
|
|
125:06 | midterm review one. The final review on there. Okay I'll check to |
|
|
125:11 | sure the midterm review is on there well. Um When you go to |
|
|
125:16 | you'll see. I've also made a with references that have all the basic |
|
|
125:20 | for these things that we've talked about you want to by the way your |
|
|
125:28 | what will be the format for the ? Will we have to print anything |
|
|
125:32 | or we can do it on the ? You can do it on the |
|
|
125:37 | . I will send it to you a as a power point file that |
|
|
125:41 | can then write in type and draw that at the at the end of |
|
|
125:50 | be um it'll be about two hours I'll have you sent to send it |
|
|
125:54 | to me at the end of that hours. Okay Thank you. You're |
|
|
126:05 | . Any other comments or questions I for you all. What what do |
|
|
126:11 | think about this? Mix of exercises lecture? I really like them. |
|
|
126:19 | helps to understand the material and give a chance to kind of check our |
|
|
126:28 | . Okay good. In my experience works well when we've done face to |
|
|
126:33 | but I wasn't sure how it would in these virtual sessions. So thanks |
|
|
126:38 | that feedback. Alright, well, the rest of your weekend. You're |
|
|
126:47 | early. It's like a snow enjoy the rest of the weekend and |
|
|
126:51 | see you next week. It will I'll be virtual again using the same |
|
|
126:55 | that we used this weekend. Thank you. Bye |
|