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00:01 | this conference will now be recorded. I believe through this equation and |
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00:10 | I really didn't explain what the terms . Uh and so you guys need |
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00:15 | stop me when I do that. I just forget. And the subsequent |
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00:24 | em accounts for the matrix. The that Custer taxes model works. It's |
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00:30 | inclusion model. So you have a which is the material and then you |
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00:36 | stuff to it. You add inclusions are ill ipso idle and shape furthermore |
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00:43 | randomly oriented inclusion. So it's icy . And plus, as I said |
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00:49 | , it's a dilute solution. The aren't interacting with each other. So |
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00:55 | have a matrix which has both modules the sheer modules. And then you |
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01:00 | inclusions of different shapes that are So on the right hand side is |
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01:09 | summation over the different conclusions. you have inclusions. A volume fraction |
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01:16 | those inclusions. The both module lists those inclusions to share module lists. |
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01:22 | we have inclusion. I you I close one eye equals two equals |
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01:27 | . These are different inclusions with different and different material properties. Right? |
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01:34 | Kay is the material property that's independent the shape for that inclusion. And |
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01:40 | shapes go into these terms the PMI the army. So that's where the |
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01:49 | ratio of the poorest comes into And so what you're doing is you're |
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01:54 | up the volume fraction of pores with shapes and different mechanical properties are different |
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02:03 | module. And so these are on right hand side, on the left |
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02:08 | side, you have the material, know, the background medium that you're |
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02:13 | the inclusions into And then you have effective modules. Uh so, |
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02:19 | asterisk 80 and us Estrus Katie. the bulk and shear molecule of the |
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02:27 | medium, which is the matrix with inclusions in it. And I noticed |
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02:34 | it's not clean because you have the is you're trying to determine in a |
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02:40 | of different places. So you have do a little bit more algebra with |
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02:45 | and solve for the effective modules. it's written this way so that you |
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02:50 | the inclusions on one side and the material properties for the matrix on the |
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02:58 | side. Okay, I hope that's by the way this symbol. And |
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03:04 | forget what that greek letter is. is a complex expression that involves the |
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03:11 | in sheer modules of the matrix. just as a shorthand, it's been |
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03:17 | with that simple, but again, is the material properties of the |
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03:27 | Okay, then we talked about dispersion we said there's a low frequency |
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03:33 | high frequency limit. If we're doing relative to sonic logs, where we |
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03:40 | be in the kilohertz range, seismic would be, you know, tens |
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03:46 | hertz. And laboratory data could be of kilohertz or megahertz. So we're |
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03:55 | to assume that with laboratory data were to the infinite frequency velocity up |
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04:04 | So there's a difference in velocity between where we think gasman is applicable. |
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04:11 | the laboratory measurements. So we need equations to handle these higher frequencies. |
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04:17 | gasman is down here? It's the frequency limits. And so this is |
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04:24 | are the equations I showed you before there. They reduce to uh gas |
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04:31 | equations when this kappa, which is mass coupling factor. When this goes |
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04:37 | infinity, this term disappears. Uh , there's a typo here. That |
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04:44 | be too Yeah, that should be times ferocity over cap of the parentheses |
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04:50 | be outside. Let's go back to I just caught that. I've only |
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04:54 | showing this for 20 years. Let's all the way back. Yeah, |
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05:01 | Ferocity over Kappa. So come back . All right. And then also |
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05:08 | modification of the density due to the differences between solid and fluid. Uh |
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05:15 | will also cancel out so, vast factor of infinity means infinite, infinitely |
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05:23 | . Right? And that's what happens zero frequency. The fluid and the |
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05:29 | are moving together, but we go higher frequencies and the fluid and the |
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05:35 | start moving out of phase. Uh , uh if we carry it to |
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05:40 | extreme, we could say no coupling the fluid and the solid, In |
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05:47 | case we would set Kappa equal to . So these are the two extremes |
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05:52 | as you vary capital, which is frequency dependent. You would very capa |
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06:00 | From infinity at zero frequency to one infinite frequency. So you could with |
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06:09 | you can handle the dispersion? All right now. Sorry about |
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06:19 | Yeah, I need to get a typist. But this was all type |
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06:23 | years ago. I was probably the , which was a mistake. All |
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06:28 | . Moving ahead. Um, I talked about using uh Beos high frequency |
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06:36 | to get at the dry frame All right. So, we could |
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06:43 | . These are clean sand stones for sand stones. The balkan sheer module |
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06:48 | are about equal. So, from U. Is equal to about |
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06:53 | . The B. P. S. ratio would be about 1.5 |
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06:58 | ratio would be .1. And remember said that if you're clean as we'll |
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07:04 | in a minute, you add other and that ratio will increase. On |
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07:09 | other hand, if you uh, gas men's equations with ultrasonic data, |
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07:16 | not what you get. You get mu bigger than one. All |
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07:21 | So, you get to mislead, get misleading dry frame properties if you |
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07:27 | gas mains equations because they're not applicable laboratory frequencies. However, if you |
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07:34 | videos equation And you assume a mass factor of one then you find broken |
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07:41 | modules are equal again. So, pretty confident that in clean sands towns |
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07:48 | can assume with the PBS ratio of 1.5 or Ko from U equals |
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07:56 | All right now. Uh That's comparing to seismic frequencies. Where do sonic |
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08:06 | belong in that. Are they in low frequency regime or in the high |
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08:12 | regime. and in the early 60s looked at this problem and they concluded |
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08:19 | stomach dogs were in the low frequency in porous permeable sand stones. |
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08:26 | their analysis was based on brian saturated and there's a lot of evidence to |
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08:32 | that if you have partial saturation or saturation uh that you may in fact |
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08:40 | be in the low frequency regime. could in fact be on uh uh |
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08:47 | the dispersal of range where the frequency the velocity is varying with frequency. |
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08:54 | , so uh if you're inverting gas equations for elastic module light and you're |
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09:02 | at the low frequency limit uh then overestimate the Hassan's ratio. Uh If |
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09:09 | is significant dispersion and the jury is out on that, we we don't |
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09:14 | have a well log that measures dispersion . We try doing this many years |
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09:22 | . There are sampling and resolution It's really hard. If you were |
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09:26 | a homogeneous medium you could have a source at different frequencies and it be |
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09:33 | easy to see the velocity dependence on . Uh huh. You could do |
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09:39 | by spectral analysis but there are all of geometric effects in the borehole. |
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09:45 | the jury is really out on We we don't know how much dispersion |
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09:49 | is check shot seems to indicate that have a few percent dispersion but it |
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09:57 | be a lot higher where you have compartments And again that that is an |
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10:02 | that is not well documented. now looking at this ratio between balkan |
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10:12 | module is ted smith did some uh modeling, we talked about Custer |
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10:19 | Does there is a similar type of called the O'connell and Budiansky model. |
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10:26 | calls it Budiansky and and O'connell um Similar idea adding penny shaped cracks to |
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10:35 | inclusion. Not exactly the same but results. And what it finds is |
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10:42 | if you add other stuff. Uh . Two if you're pure courts you |
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10:52 | to have equal bulk unsure module. but if you add other materials that |
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10:59 | like clay you could increase the bulk is relative to the share modules. |
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11:05 | these are of the frame. So dry friends And here is being very |
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11:12 | about the minerals he's adding. So here we have courts which was |
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11:20 | persons ratio. V PBS ratio of persons ratio 0.1 corresponds to a V |
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11:28 | . B s ratio of 1.53. say courses down here Someplace in the |
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11:34 | of 1.5 Fewer courts or v. . b. s. to |
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11:39 | Um Now as you decrease the amount courts and you add other minerals is |
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11:45 | muscovite which should be somewhat similar to . Uh Not exactly, but he |
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11:53 | properties from muscovite. He's added calcite he's adding flour to replace feldspar. |
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12:00 | he's getting a dramatic increase in the . P. B. S ratio |
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12:06 | the dry frame. Uh And that's the minerals have higher fluorescence ratios. |
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12:13 | if we're talking about inclusions in a background, then the minimum module is |
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12:19 | going to be very important. Remember we were talking about sphere packs, |
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12:24 | mineral module list didn't have a big on the V. P. |
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12:28 | S ratio of the dry spear But if we have a cracked solid |
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12:34 | a solid with inclusions in it, the mineral V. PBS is going |
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12:38 | be very important. And you can it basically almost linearly varies between the |
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12:44 | . P. B. S of , and the V. P. |
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12:47 | . S. And the other mineral mixing. So the moral of the |
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12:51 | is if you have, if you have a clean coarse sandstone, you |
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12:57 | have a higher persons ratio of the . Now, uh we talked about |
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13:07 | relate transformations and so forth and fluids we're producing a reservoir as pressures are |
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13:15 | , there's the potential to have sudden in the phase composition. So for |
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13:22 | , here you might have gas on of oil. Uh This would would |
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13:27 | been in equilibrium uh in geological equilibrium the time you drill well and suppose |
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13:36 | start dropping the pressure, then the could come out of solution in the |
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13:43 | . And keep in mind here, have a big change in the bulk |
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13:48 | of the fluids. The gas is more compressible than the oil. |
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13:54 | this could have been gassed over brian theoretically could have some gas dissolved in |
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14:00 | brine, especially if it's fresh and very saline. You drop the pressure |
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14:06 | gas could come out of solution of oil most likely, but it's also |
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14:11 | could come out of the bride. now remember Woods equation we we produce |
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14:19 | few gas bubbles here and now the leg. Then we'll have very similar |
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14:26 | to the gas legs. So immediately production, we've got big changes now |
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14:32 | enhanced oil recovery where we're injecting, saw we had pressure fronts where you |
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14:38 | pressure increases and as you produce you have pressure decreases. So it could |
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14:44 | out to be a very complicated Just as an example, the effect |
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14:51 | we have gas over brian stand and we produce the gas. Maybe it's |
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14:57 | depletion drive. We don't have a water support of the pressure. Maybe |
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15:05 | brian leg is not well connected. an isolated compartment. So you have |
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15:11 | depletion and gas starts to come out solution from the brine in this case |
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15:17 | it changes the seismic response totally. . And this could happen on primary |
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15:27 | , where the rock fluid properties are . And I've seen this happen a |
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15:34 | . Where here we have a recent section at the time? It was |
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15:41 | overproducing fields and there is a bright associated with the production. And now |
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15:49 | want to explore. There was a hole here and a dry hole here |
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15:54 | you have some weak amplitudes over Now in exploration, we'd like to |
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16:01 | analog as we like to look at we have production, see how that |
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16:07 | manifests itself in the seismic data. here we see that there's a weak |
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16:14 | , but it's not nowhere near as and coherent as this aptitude here. |
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16:21 | might cause us to be pessimistic about location over here when in fact that |
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16:27 | drilled and it was packed and the in the use of this as an |
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16:37 | is that this is what the seismic looks like after production, but this |
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16:43 | before production. And if production has the fluid properties, it could give |
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16:50 | a different response. So, and tendency would be for things to brighten |
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16:56 | as you lower the pressure. So use uh using analog is where you |
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17:03 | recent data after production could cause you be pessimistic about your prospect. So |
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17:10 | you probably need to model those changes pressure versus current or pressures at the |
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17:18 | that the size was acquired. one thing we find is that gas |
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17:30 | equations are a little bit problematical and , if you think back to the |
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17:38 | of gas mains equations, uh, that the pore pressure would culebra rate |
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17:45 | the pore space. If you have shell, that's very low permeability. |
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17:57 | , during the passage of the there may not be time to celebrate |
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18:03 | pore pressures. And so these are data. And what we find is |
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18:10 | if we cross plug VP vs. . S in shells that have gasped |
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18:17 | them, we find a suppressed Pds ratio relative to the wet show |
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18:23 | of the presence of gas, but as far as gas mains equations would |
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18:30 | predicted. So if I took the rock line and a velocity porosity transform |
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18:36 | I predicted using gas mains equations. what the corresponding gas share line would |
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18:44 | , what I find is, I quite make it. I'm in between |
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18:48 | two and and so it has to with the lack of pressure calibration in |
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18:55 | shell. Um Now, this is controversial subject. Um I've published with |
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19:04 | of my students examples where it seemed we were getting good correspondence using gas |
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19:12 | equations. The problem is that as we saw before in low porosity |
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19:20 | , gas once equations could be very , uh if we have a slight |
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19:27 | in ferocity. So how well do really know the ferocity in order to |
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19:32 | a fluid substitution. This was another where we were in a largely shell |
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19:45 | but it's these data were from high DSPs In the near surface at two |
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19:52 | locations. Uh had a well away a producing field that was a dry |
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20:01 | and then in a well above producing . And we're looking at the relatively |
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20:07 | surface sediments. So here we have shale trends here, kind of like |
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20:15 | mud rock line here we have our brian stand trends. And the VSP |
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20:21 | were clustering for the well that was from the production. We're clustering over |
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20:27 | where we uh we have fried saturated and for the well over the |
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20:33 | we saw a variety of points in . Now interestingly, uh the difference |
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20:42 | these points and these points was more the sheer velocity then in the P |
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20:48 | philosophy. So you could not fluid these and get this. This actually |
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20:58 | implies a different rock frame. And explanation here and there was geochemical data |
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21:04 | suggest this was true, is that had microbial action on the micro cp |
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21:12 | above the reservoir that were precipitating And so uh these uh this location |
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21:22 | more heavily cemented than that location and result was an increase uh in the |
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21:28 | wave velocity over and above the fluid . Uh huh. So essentially the |
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21:38 | and the fluid effect almost canceled out in the P wave velocity. But |
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21:43 | see the segmentation in the sheer weight . Alright. Some practical suggestions when |
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21:57 | fluid substitution. I already mentioned how logs can be unreliable in gas |
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22:06 | Remember we saw that example where there cycle skipping. There are a variety |
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22:10 | reasons if you have gas in the bore the gas bubbles cause cause scattering |
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22:16 | with your sonic signal. When you Lovie PBS ratios like in the gas |
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22:22 | , the coupling of acoustic energy into into the formation is also reduced. |
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22:30 | that would give you a lower amplitude . And um there's also the question |
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22:37 | invasion. Right? So remember we mud cake. We have a rule |
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22:45 | borehole. And we also have an zone around the borehole. And that's |
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22:51 | clog is a refraction experiment. And you remember from geophysics 101 when you |
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23:00 | a high velocity layer, uh your waves don't penetrate down into an underlying |
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23:07 | velocity layer. Right? So if have invaded the formation, pushed the |
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23:12 | away from the well poor, the log is going to read the faster |
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23:19 | if that if you were able to all the hydrocarbons away. Um So |
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23:24 | the potential for that to happen. The death of the log uh you |
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23:32 | , doesn't see through the infected it only sees a few inches into |
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23:36 | formation. So for a variety of we we suspect are well logs uh |
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23:46 | our reservoirs. Unfortunately we suspect our log and our sonic log as being |
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23:52 | of what a seismic wave we'll see from the surface. Uh, so |
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23:58 | that reason we're asking for trouble when start with the gas damn velocity. |
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24:08 | let me, I hate to do . We're gonna do a balkan |
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24:13 | mind scan here. We're going to into very quickly. Go to the |
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24:19 | of No, I can't, I it up. You can't do that |
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24:28 | . You can do it in Okay, yeah, let's get out |
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24:32 | go back to here. Another reason you have low velocity sentiments. Another |
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24:40 | why you're gassed and velocities are suspect again, because it's a refraction |
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24:46 | the sonic log can't read velocities lower the drilling mud velocity. So I |
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24:52 | that in this case these gas fans , the actual velocity was actually much |
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25:00 | . But what's being the stomach log seen as a direct way through the |
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25:05 | mud. And so you get flatlining right at the velocity of the drilling |
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25:11 | . So in fact, maybe the here was 3000 ft/s. But the |
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25:17 | log is reading 5000. Now, you do fluid substitution and you start |
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25:22 | 5000, there's a chance if you to predict the brine stand velocity, |
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25:29 | a chance you would predict something much than the actual brian. Stand |
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25:33 | Whereas if you started with the correct and velocity, you might match the |
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25:39 | stand velocity. So the moral of story is um don't start with your |
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25:47 | , sand and fluid substitute to Start with your brine, sand and |
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25:52 | substitute to gas. Right? The , sand velocities are far more likely |
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25:58 | be nearly correct. We talked about logging early on in the course. |
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26:07 | in mind that the density log is , is not designed for seismic |
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26:13 | very sensitive the whole conditions. So very suspicious of your density log when |
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26:19 | use it for seismic applications. Sometimes better to predict the density from other |
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26:27 | than to use the actual density law you're doing fluid substitution. Don't be |
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26:36 | in the types of hydrocarbon saturation, that you would get uh if you |
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26:42 | a very clean formation, you could a very low water saturation, but |
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26:47 | Shelley formations there's usually a lot of you know, residual water. Uh |
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26:56 | . So you would uh it's unusual get water saturation in the Shelley formation |
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27:05 | much lower than 40%. Okay, keep in mind that you can't measure |
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27:12 | that's slower than the drilling mud. , I've mentioned repeatedly that there's something |
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27:24 | about the reindeer Hunt Gardner equation. we said the reverend Gardner equation applies |
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27:30 | highly liquefied rocks. And uh huh you could do a ballpark fluid substitution |
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27:44 | by varying the fluid velocity in the behind Gardner equation, whereas that will |
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27:50 | not work with the widely time average . So, I was just curious |
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27:56 | if we had rocks that obeyed the martin Gardner equations. So I have |
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28:02 | I'm plotting in brine stand velocity here ferocity and uh I then do fluid |
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28:11 | using the Raymond Gardner equation. So the lavender line there and then I |
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28:19 | compared it to my empirical relation that talked about last time. And we're |
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28:24 | to look at that again in a and it turns out that they agree |
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28:30 | well. So at least in well ified rocks, it looks like if |
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28:36 | if you're a fluid substituting to you can get very close to the |
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28:40 | answer using the Ramen Hangartner equation or empirical relationship. Again, this would |
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28:48 | be right in well with the five . All right. So, we |
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28:55 | a bunch of exercises on fluid So, let's just walk through |
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29:03 | Um the Yeah, this is going be a lot of work. |
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29:08 | so get to this as soon as can. Um So, I'm asking |
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29:15 | to calculate the effective module list of uh oil water mixture. I have |
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29:23 | properties here that have been put out Mike vassals fluid properties program. It |
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29:28 | the predecessor to U. H. . Flag pro program that came out |
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29:34 | dr hans lab. Um So there fluid properties that are a function of |
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29:43 | pressure, oil gravity, gas, ratio, gas gravity. Uh and |
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29:51 | result is you get a modulation giga that's this one, 1.2835 Compare that |
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29:59 | water, which Insanely that that could 3.5. Right? So we have |
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30:04 | big difference between oil and water here you're going to mix them as a |
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30:12 | of water saturation using Woods equation. that that's all you have to do |
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30:17 | exercise and I'm one just to fly equation, same equation you used for |
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30:23 | suspension. Previously, you're going to use it to mix too fluids, |
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30:30 | bubbles of one fluid in the Okay, Next, we're going to |
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30:38 | do a fluid substitution using gas mints . And so I give you a |
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30:46 | wave velocity and a ferocity. And You're going to so this is for |
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30:55 | 100% brine, saturated rock And you're to predict the velocity at 50% gas |
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31:04 | and you're going to do it as for different uh gas ma july and |
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31:12 | . And so you can start uh this And uh use a water saturation |
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31:23 | 50%. And yeah, I uh let's see, we have row |
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31:33 | and Yeah, I'm just telling you have a gas modules for .1 and |
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31:42 | vary that and see what happens. and uh the same outline that we |
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31:47 | through a couple of times previously. just repeated it here for your |
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31:53 | I suggest you can either use K mu que dry equals you. Or |
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32:01 | could try to invert for K. from gas, those equations, but |
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32:07 | that you're going to need DS, I didn't give you, but you |
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32:11 | get that from one of the B V s trend curves. Okay, |
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32:19 | . Uh, it's a case where know the brian sand velocity and we |
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32:24 | the gas and velocities and we're going compare these two gas moves equations and |
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32:31 | think we know what the appropriate rock to use our um, but we |
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32:38 | not be right. So the idea to take a first guess with what |
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32:44 | think the rock and fluid properties we're going to try to from the |
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32:50 | sand velocity, we're going to try predict the gas and velocity and then |
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32:54 | going to play with the parameters to if we could get a better |
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32:59 | So, um, if the result get suggests that the dry frame, |
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33:09 | modules is much greater than the dry of sheer module lists suggests the reason |
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33:15 | that might be true. Okay, we could do fluid substitution on the |
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33:26 | equation and that would give us a gas sandstone equation. So, if |
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33:33 | have the garden of VP density trend sandstone and my VPs trend for |
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33:41 | um you could vary VP and you estimate density and from that ferocity, |
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33:48 | clean sands, you can also get share module is from the, from |
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33:53 | DS and the density. Then you everything you need, you could get |
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33:59 | saturated, you could use gasman the is there in your notes to get |
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34:07 | uh huh the both modules, the frame module is and then you could |
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34:13 | back to get the gas man built lists uh, fluid substitute density also |
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34:22 | get the plane with modules for gas for gas. And so now you |
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34:28 | thought the gas dan P wave velocity the gas and density and compare that |
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34:36 | the gardener equation. And as to question, how important is it to |
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34:43 | whether you have a gas stand or ? Is it safe just to use |
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34:47 | gardener? Uh huh equation. Or I do I need to take into |
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34:55 | the fluid substitution by the way for the gardener equation here, you want |
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35:00 | use the sandstone Gardner equation. And uh that that is in your |
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35:08 | . And remember we modify them to through the courts point and uh for |
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35:17 | same uh extending this exercise, uh the same thing with the calculate p |
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35:26 | velocity versus saturation using Gassman and the saturation model. And just discuss how |
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35:36 | differ. Okay, then, I some real world examples. So these |
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35:46 | cases that were encountered by exploration ists uh, it causes you to |
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35:54 | you know, it's a real world as opposed to a textbook problem. |
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36:00 | there may be too little information, may be too much information. So |
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36:05 | going to have to sort through all that and come up with an answer |
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36:10 | . So, uh, so here go. There is a well that |
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36:16 | a clean sand with 60 ft 24 gravity crude and a low gas oil |
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36:27 | At a depth of 70 500 The oil stamp velocity was 11,000ft per |
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36:36 | And there was no porosity log, the corporate city was 24%. When |
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36:42 | say no porosity log in the early , maybe they didn't read neutron |
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36:47 | Maybe they just relied on sonic And you know, we're trying, |
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36:52 | don't know what the effect of the is. So it's a little bit |
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36:57 | until we figure things out what the is just from the summit velocities. |
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37:04 | that well drilled through the oil water and found brian stand with a velocity |
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37:11 | 13,200 ft per second, but they have a porosity log. Sometimes drilling |
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37:18 | won't allow you that, you drillers are worried about density, log |
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37:22 | and things like that. So there's big change in velocity is that due |
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37:30 | um the difference in fluids or uh couldn't be that the rocks are |
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37:37 | different deaths. Well, the look the same on the gamma ray |
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37:44 | . And if you take the brine and take the oil properties. Remember |
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37:52 | low G. O. R. very light gravity then. So You |
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38:01 | an oil stand velocity of 12,800 kenya, you're seeing Velocity of 11,000 |
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38:14 | . So the velocity change is a bigger then uh things to be |
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38:22 | So what could be causing that Does everybody understand the question When I |
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38:36 | substitute? It's almost the same But the logs were showing me a |
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38:40 | difference in velocity. I need a to explain what's going on. |
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38:52 | Okay. Another case here we're shallow the gas stand has a velocity of |
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39:02 | microseconds per foot And very high porosity . Um brian sand very nearby had |
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39:12 | porosity and was almost as slow. my uh microseconds per foot. The |
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39:20 | logs in the two sand appeared almost . The density was slightly lower in |
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39:26 | gassing. If you substitute brian for . So I start with a gas |
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39:34 | velocity of 50-60 ft/s. And I gasman flew substitution, I get 7400 |
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39:42 | per second but I only measured ft/s. So why, why the |
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39:50 | , why is my predicted brian stan much higher than my observed brian standard |
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39:59 | And explain what's going on with the logs, we have a high porosity |
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40:06 | . The gas hand is slightly lower . Then the brian stamp. |
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40:13 | I understand the problem or can explain these measurements. Okay, another |
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40:25 | A clean oil sand was drilled in North day and it was launched to |
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40:30 | the velocity of 9800 ft per second a ferocity of 32%. It's a |
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40:37 | stand and it's filled with oil. Api gravity of the oil was 35° |
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40:44 | the gastro ratio was close to the point brian filson, immediately beneath the |
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40:53 | , sands had the same velocity and and density. Uh huh. Should |
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41:03 | , do you need to do uh substitution. Can you think about what |
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41:08 | of complications might be going on? uh if you explain your answer. |
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41:20 | , last one of these, A stands was encountered at nine around 9000 |
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|
41:29 | . There was minor gas detective in sand during drilling, but not enough |
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|
41:33 | appear on the loss. Um It a significant amount of gas to show |
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41:40 | as a resistive anomaly. Remember if have an on off switch in |
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|
41:47 | um you may have a few percent saturation that you don't see on your |
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41:54 | laws, but the velocities of the were measured uh, Velocity 10,000ft/s |
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42:04 | 30%. Uh the sand was 55% Quartz, 45% clay water saturation |
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42:14 | one. Um to estimate the effect the gas from the sand, A |
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42:22 | saturation of 90% was used. And predicted Gaston velocity was then computed to |
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|
42:29 | 90 300 ft/s. Um What errors have been made in this calculation? |
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42:36 | you sure of that number or what do you have about that number? |
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42:44 | , Was something procedurally perhaps done Okay, so those are more thought |
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42:57 | . Uh, now, we'll want do some computations and compared to some |
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|
43:03 | . So, uh, we have table here for a particular stand and |
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|
43:10 | could tell you in advance the sand very Calgary us. So it's not |
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43:17 | clean sand situation. And so it's you some rock properties, some |
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43:25 | uh, VPN Ds yeah, on water saturated rock and on the dry |
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|
43:32 | . And so, uh, predict water saturated velocities from the dry velocities |
|
|
43:37 | predict the dry velocities from the water philosophies. So go go both directions |
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|
43:45 | draw some conclusions. Okay, I gave you an empirical equation, if |
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|
43:57 | know the brian stand velocity, I get a ballpark estimate of the gas |
|
|
44:03 | velocity. Um So here we have measured velocities compare to this equation and |
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|
44:12 | compared to the math the equation. that's really uh, prepping you for |
|
|
44:18 | has come. We're gonna be comparing these approximations in a bit. |
|
|
44:30 | now, we have a bunch of here in bryan stand, shale and |
|
|
44:36 | sand. Sometimes the gas sand is across the water contact from the brian |
|
|
44:43 | , but sometimes it's just the nearest sand to the gas hand, because |
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|
44:48 | we don't have a water contact. the nearest brian standing gas. And |
|
|
44:55 | again, they're not necessarily uh the piece of rock. So keep that |
|
|
45:01 | mind. But it's a nice set measurements representative worldwide collection of gas man |
|
|
45:09 | and brian stand velocities associated or at nearby bryan stand velocities. So go |
|
|
45:16 | and uh, make the predictions. , uh, assume the Visa queen's |
|
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45:26 | , which they're not necessarily um I'm sorry. Yeah, okay. |
|
|
45:36 | , so calculate the gas fan velocity the brian sand velocity using gas math |
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|
45:41 | , my approximation in the Mathare approximation compared to the measured velocities, graphic |
|
|
45:50 | , draw some conclusions. Now, if we are assumption about the clean |
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|
46:05 | is wrong? What do we Right. And how important is it |
|
|
46:10 | we assume? What kind of errors we going to get in gasolines equations |
|
|
46:15 | we um make the assumption the sands clean and they're not. So, |
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|
46:20 | going to ask you to do a substitution on this rock using gas moves |
|
|
46:27 | , assuming you have a clean So you could say bulk and share |
|
|
46:32 | are equal. But if I had mythologies, I might have other relationships |
|
|
46:39 | balkan share module by the way, to 10 times per centimeter squared is |
|
|
46:45 | pascal? That's so use these different and see how much your fluid substitution |
|
|
46:55 | changes. All right. So how was it that you got the |
|
|
47:00 | Right, okay then. Um moving into kind of direct hydrocarbon indicator |
|
|
47:14 | And here are some models that came Hampton Russell and they had some block |
|
|
47:23 | of P wave velocity density, P impedance, peewee reflectivity and synthetic. |
|
|
47:32 | And also share wave uh huh density share reflectivity. So um what kind |
|
|
47:41 | rock is this layer here? So the interpretation from the blocked model and |
|
|
47:49 | thing here. Make the interpretation from block model. All right then some |
|
|
47:57 | up exercises based on everything we've talked so far. I want you to |
|
|
48:02 | some curves like so if I plotted wave velocity versus fluid density as I |
|
|
48:09 | from gas to oil the water, would the velocity change as I changed |
|
|
48:14 | on the average? How would the change as I increase the age uh |
|
|
48:23 | depth ratio. How is the velocity ? As I change saturation ferocity, |
|
|
48:30 | of segmentation, increasing poor pressure, pressure sends built ratio. Um Most |
|
|
48:40 | these, you'll assume everything else is constant when you're varying the sand shell |
|
|
48:45 | , show you will vary the ferocity and take a crack at completing this |
|
|
48:56 | . So again, all else remaining as I'm varying certain things. Head |
|
|
49:03 | the PVS density and D. PBS if I'm in a classic rock or |
|
|
49:10 | I'm in a crystalline carbonate rock. I started it right. So you |
|
|
49:17 | need to uh complete the direction and talked about this one already. But |
|
|
49:27 | as a review I'd like you to through it again. So look at |
|
|
49:30 | plot, we have velocity these a measurements. So we have brian stan |
|
|
49:36 | and dry velocities. And you see we're more straight up and down. |
|
|
49:43 | the rigidity changes increases as we get we drive. Sometimes the rigidity |
|
|
49:50 | So explain these points. Uh Just make an interpretation as to what's |
|
|
50:01 | . Yeah. Okay, well, we have a little bit more |
|
|
50:05 | So I'll go on to the next which is again, we're still on |
|
|
50:10 | substitution but the next topic is stochastic substitution. So the idea is this |
|
|
50:18 | pretty traditional to start with the Well, log apply gas mains equations |
|
|
50:28 | predicts predicts the gas well off. we get a synthetic for the brian |
|
|
50:34 | synthetic for the gas man. And exploration practice this is often called the |
|
|
50:43 | response. Now, the fact of matter is there is uncertainty in gas |
|
|
50:51 | equations and given the uncertainty and the parameters to gasman and the natural variability |
|
|
51:00 | what the brian response might be, can have a wide variety of gas |
|
|
51:06 | and if you're gonna risk if you're to evaluate a seismic response and you're |
|
|
51:12 | to try to assess the probability that gas. You really need to think |
|
|
51:18 | the variety of Ryan responses you could in the variety of gas responses that |
|
|
51:23 | can have. And so one component that is looking at the error propagation |
|
|
51:28 | gas plants equations. What if I'm on my inputs to gas plants |
|
|
51:34 | how much is that going to change gas response? And the answer |
|
|
51:39 | I'll tell you in advance, the is it can be enormous, especially |
|
|
51:43 | low porosity. So rather than doing single gasping substitution, we're going to |
|
|
51:50 | it sarcastically. So in this case numerically rather than doing one substitution, |
|
|
51:59 | did about 2000 substitution and where we into account the uncertainty of the input |
|
|
52:07 | . Um Now we didn't provide a density function in describing the uncertainty. |
|
|
52:20 | a little bit more realistic to just we could be in a uniform Range |
|
|
52:27 | we could have a uniform distribution within certain range. So, for |
|
|
52:31 | if I give you a ferocity of , It could be anywhere between eight |
|
|
52:36 | 12%. Um, you could add and, you know, make a |
|
|
52:43 | or bell shaped type distributions. But the end, your results are going |
|
|
52:49 | be pretty similar. It's more important recognize what are independent distributions and what |
|
|
52:56 | correlated distributions than the exact shape of distribution because, you know, central |
|
|
53:02 | theorem, you're going to be dominated the mean values anyway. And so |
|
|
53:09 | just gonna assume uh uniform distribution. equally probable within a realistic range. |
|
|
53:18 | uh I really don't think that's very . Also, we're going to assume |
|
|
53:28 | of these errors are un correlated except ferocity. That's and we're going to |
|
|
53:33 | that that's highly correlated to density. , so what are the parameters were |
|
|
53:40 | into gas routes equations? Well, wave velocity for the brine stand and |
|
|
53:47 | typical brian sands. Arab put it way, repeatability or error bars on |
|
|
53:54 | measurement on the order of 2%. so uh this might be a realistic |
|
|
54:02 | for kilometers per second plus or minus . That's pretty accurate. Shear wave |
|
|
54:09 | are slower, but the error is less. And the error in shear |
|
|
54:16 | velocities is can be significantly higher percentage . So, but we're going to |
|
|
54:23 | it's the same magnitude Here. So plus or -11 collaborators per second density |
|
|
54:34 | . Remember we said uh delta rho than 0.5 g per CC. We |
|
|
54:41 | believe it. Uh huh. And the uncertainties were going to say, |
|
|
54:46 | , that's the log is good Plus the minus point oh +33 g |
|
|
54:51 | centimeter. Uh That's unless it goes bad. But we're assuming that the |
|
|
54:57 | logs really horrible. You're not going be using it. Right? So |
|
|
55:01 | is where you think you have an density loss. So I'm gonna go |
|
|
55:05 | assume that uncertainty. Um Prosise my , you're rarely better than to porosity |
|
|
55:14 | it. And so I could I could have an average ferocity at |
|
|
55:18 | plus or minus two ferocity in its 30% plus or minus two ferocity in |
|
|
55:24 | to porosity units is probably as good you get. So when the |
|
|
55:28 | these get very low, that's a percent error. So, but I |
|
|
55:34 | that's realistic because in making that ferocity , there are all kinds of |
|
|
55:41 | We have the solid grain modules, of course depends on the composition and |
|
|
55:45 | don't know exactly what the composition of is necessarily. So we're going to |
|
|
55:52 | conservative in this case and say plus minus two giga pascal's on the mineral |
|
|
55:59 | list. We're going to assume we perfectly the brian modules. That that's |
|
|
56:05 | big assumption, but I'm trying to conservative here in my errors. I'm |
|
|
56:10 | going to ignore error in the grain lists, assume I know the water |
|
|
56:15 | list. And another big assumption. going to assume I know the properties |
|
|
56:22 | the hydra carpets. I also, I'm assuming the initial water saturation is |
|
|
56:29 | . So I truly have a brian and another thing that's usually not well |
|
|
56:35 | at all, especially when you're prospecting the water saturation of your prospect, |
|
|
56:40 | I'm ignoring all of these errors. , these are the only Arizona considering |
|
|
56:46 | grain module is porosity density, VPN I'm assuming I know everything else |
|
|
56:53 | And let's see what kind of error produces in my stochastic simulation. So |
|
|
56:59 | started with a Brian stand velocity of km/s. And what I find is |
|
|
57:06 | some of my simulations actually increase the unrealistic. But that would have |
|
|
57:12 | you know, perfectly spherical pores for . Um, so this is where |
|
|
57:18 | started at four. So that O for original, that's my original p |
|
|
57:23 | velocity, mm hmm. The exact solution using the mean values, assuming |
|
|
57:32 | had perfect measurements would be there At km/s. Uh huh. My approximation |
|
|
57:40 | this case gives you 3.82. So pretty close to the right answer. |
|
|
57:46 | , just so happened that way. didn't force it that way. |
|
|
57:51 | math o approximation in this case is little bit off. It could go |
|
|
57:56 | way. Some sometimes Matthew is going be more correct than Pakistan, but |
|
|
58:02 | moral of historians, the approximations are if you like math co or if |
|
|
58:09 | like Castagna, you're still within the within uh, the error bars of |
|
|
58:18 | prediction anyway, so, um, the approximations are close enough. |
|
|
58:28 | now, let's uh, add one , let's say we're not sure exactly |
|
|
58:33 | the bulk modules of the water And we don't know exactly what are |
|
|
58:39 | properties are, By the way, don't let the gas module lists get |
|
|
58:44 | than zero. Right? So we're to truncate this at zero but it's |
|
|
58:49 | to be as high as close to and as low as zero. |
|
|
58:58 | wow, it's nuts. Absolutely Now, what was different about this |
|
|
59:15 | ? Well, the uncertainty in the parameters resulted in this huge tail over |
|
|
59:22 | . Uh huh. I mean, at that range, absolutely enormous. |
|
|
59:32 | the way I presented these results at E G and Z W wang stood |
|
|
59:38 | , you know, bachelor long Z w wang stood up and said |
|
|
59:42 | don't believe it can't be that Um Here's a lower porosity rock. |
|
|
59:51 | the percent error in ferocity is Uh Again we're only considering grain module |
|
|
59:59 | up and just huge variation uh in case uh Monaco was exactly equal to |
|
|
60:13 | the exact result and my approximation was . But again, both are within |
|
|
60:20 | distribution and adding more uncertainty. Oh sorry. Now we've got a low |
|
|
60:30 | rock and you would think things would better at low velocities well. But |
|
|
60:36 | in mind, remember we saw that effect of uh poor shape was enormous |
|
|
60:43 | these low velocity rocks. So lots of uncertainty and all the parameters |
|
|
60:51 | just an unbelievable range in the possible . So um you know, you |
|
|
61:02 | be very, very precise in your but whether that is close to reality |
|
|
61:08 | not, you know, you could the most sophisticated equations. But if |
|
|
61:13 | number is going in or wrong, what you get out is going to |
|
|
61:17 | wrong. Maybe you don't know the that well. Maybe you don't have |
|
|
61:23 | control over all of these. In case uh maybe just taking a rough |
|
|
61:30 | using one of the approximations is good . And by the way, this |
|
|
61:37 | all assuming that the gasman result is correct answer. Remember we've in gas |
|
|
61:47 | equations were assuming the pore pressure we're assuming a single mineral components. |
|
|
61:54 | you have multiple mineral components uh that wildly different properties, we have the |
|
|
62:00 | get a lot more complicated and there is no general solution. There are |
|
|
62:07 | cases where we have solutions but not general solution. So we don't really |
|
|
62:13 | how correct guess whose equations are. they don't take into account this |
|
|
62:18 | L angry at slumber. She thinks seen in version and not taking into |
|
|
62:25 | invasion. So, you know, tremendous uncertainty in the fluids institution. |
|
|
62:35 | , the uncertainty can be larger than predicted change in velocity. Uh, |
|
|
62:41 | is the range of outputs is usually than the errors in the approximations. |
|
|
62:48 | so as a result, when we high department indicators, we need to |
|
|
62:53 | at these statistically we shouldn't have one for what a gas, My prospects |
|
|
63:01 | look like, there should be a of answers. And then from the |
|
|
63:05 | of answers, we should calculate a that you have hydro purpose and if |
|
|
63:10 | have time before the end of the , I'll show you how to do |
|
|
63:17 | . That would be our last which would be advanced applications. |
|
|
63:23 | odds are we won't get there. haven't gotten there in years. So |
|
|
63:28 | , but there, but you can with the uncertainty. And I've published |
|
|
63:34 | couple of papers on that. just to summarize and then we'll go |
|
|
63:44 | for today. Grassroots equations are not applicable. A lot of the assumptions |
|
|
63:53 | violated. Um if you have highly mineral components, we don't know if |
|
|
64:00 | work if we have low fluid mobility the low permeability, zor, high |
|
|
64:05 | is that's a problem. Invasion, , et cetera. We have high |
|
|
64:11 | to input parameters which can be significantly error. Um We haven't taken into |
|
|
64:19 | remember Gaston's equations are purely mechanical. haven't taken into account possible differences in |
|
|
64:26 | genesis and geological history between the gas brine saturated rocks. Remember I showed |
|
|
64:32 | the case where we had more cement where we had hydrocarbons due to microbial |
|
|
64:38 | . So, you know, that absolutely not taken to accounts if we |
|
|
64:44 | to be at low effective stress, can be chemical effects like repulsion between |
|
|
64:51 | , there can be capillary effects. we could have framed hardening or softening |
|
|
64:56 | we, especially when we have Shelley , um we haven't, you |
|
|
65:03 | we've assumed that the fluids are homogeneous distributed throughout the rocks. Um We |
|
|
65:11 | talked about the patchy saturation model and we have time in talking about |
|
|
65:17 | I'll show you the effect of Uh homogeneous distribution of hydrocarbons between four |
|
|
65:25 | All of these results in woods equation necessarily being applicable. Uh I also |
|
|
65:33 | to point out that fluid substitution is the wrong exploration question. Yeah, |
|
|
65:40 | exploration question is not. What is difference in response between hydrocarbon saturated rock |
|
|
65:48 | a brian saturated rock? The exploration is I have uh an amplitude of |
|
|
65:55 | certain magnitude, what is the probability gas or its prime? Now that |
|
|
66:02 | are two very different questions. And fact, if I'm comparing to |
|
|
66:08 | I have a bright spot, that's dry hole, I have a bright |
|
|
66:12 | , that's pay. Um is fluid ? The answer to that question? |
|
|
66:19 | not. So you have to think rather than the fluid substituted brian |
|
|
66:25 | you have to think about the equivalent sand, What brian sand would give |
|
|
66:29 | the same response as the guest? , well that's all I have for |
|
|
66:35 | , Are there any questions in which I'll let you go question. |
|
|
66:46 | I wanted to make sure I was along correctly, it was actually thinking |
|
|
66:50 | an example. So I have a northwest of Australia and it's, I |
|
|
66:57 | a hard Marley section and then underneath I have a bunch of sadistic |
|
|
67:01 | alluvial gas field but I don't really a good water leg and I thought |
|
|
67:08 | caught you say that you go from and then substituting gas, but you |
|
|
67:14 | do the opposite, correct well you that if you can, but then |
|
|
67:19 | have no choice, but you have evaluate your logs pretty carefully. |
|
|
67:24 | Okay. Okay. Yeah. I like, how would you do |
|
|
67:27 | Like let's say like this was a . Well in a block where no |
|
|
67:31 | wells have been drilled and you saw amplitude anomalies and you wanted to see |
|
|
67:37 | you backtrack and see what the water response would be to see that those |
|
|
67:41 | . Okay. You can do that with great much greater care. |
|
|
67:48 | Okay. I mean, this is modern data. So I feel |
|
|
67:50 | you know, like you're going to good constraints on your physical parameters and |
|
|
67:55 | cord and took everything under the Nice. I'd be happy to look |
|
|
67:59 | that for you. Okay. Very good. Any other questions? |
|
|
68:10 | , thank |
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