c. petroleum accumulation

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1 Mud logging training course Level 1 / V 1.0 Petroleum Accumulation Private & Confidential Prepared by Nael Zaino

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Page 1: C. Petroleum Accumulation

1

Mud logging training course

Level 1 / V 1.0

Petroleum Accumulation

Private & Confidential

Prepared by Nael Zaino

Page 2: C. Petroleum Accumulation

Private & Confidential 2Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

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Petroleum Accumulation

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IntroductionFor petroleum to accumulate; there must be:1. Source Rocks: These contain organic material from plants or algae. They are buried

and cooked below the earth’s surface for millions of years.

2. Migration: Once the oil is formed, it is forced by gravity to move out of the source rock and upwards towards the surface. This is a very slow process travelling only a few kilometers over millions of years.

3. Reservoir rock: The oil or gas will flow until it collects in a reservoir rock, which has pores (holes) that act like a sponge. Trap (a barrier to fluid flow so that accumulation can occur against it).

4. Trap: To trap the oil and gas the reservoir rock needs to have an impermeable rock, called a ‘cap-rock’ above it and around it. This cap rock will not allow oil or gas to travel through it. If there is no cap-rock the oil and gas will reach the surface as oil or gas seep.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

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Most knowledge has been obtained from experience and observation, but certain generalizations can be made:

• Petroleum originates from organic matter• To become commercial, the hydrocarbons must be concentrated• Petroleum reservoirs primarily occur in sedimentary rocks

1- Origin of oil and gas and Source rocksThe story of oil and gas begins hundreds of millions of years ago when the Earth was covered in swamplands filled with huge trees and the seas were teaming with microscopic plants and animals. The oil and gas deposits started forming about 290 to 350 million years ago during the Carboniferous Period, which get its name from the basic element in oil and gas; carbon.

A popular belief is that oil comes from dead dinosaurs. It doesn’t. The giant reptiles lived mostly from 65 to 250 million years ago, and most scientists believe oil actually comes from the tiniest plants and animals that preceded them.

As they died and sank to the ocean floor, the decomposing organisms, along with mud and silt, created hundreds of feet of sediment, Sand, clay and minerals settled over this organic-rich mud and solidified into rocks. The weight of the rocks above pressed the mud into a fraction of its original thickness. Heat from within the Earth cooked the mud’s organic remains into a soup of hydrocarbons, the main element of petroleum and natural gas.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

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Diatoms are an important group of phytoplankton. They contain a silica skeleton and may reach 1 mm in diameter (right). Other phytoplankton organisms have a carbonate skeleton.Zooplankton includes planktonic foraminifera, radiolaria, and planktonic crustacea. One theory for the origin of oil that Oil and gas originate from organic matter in sedimentary rocks, dead vegetation in the absence of oxygen ceases to decompose. It accumulates in the soil as humus and as deposits of peat in bogs and swamps. Peat buried beneath a cover of clays and sands becomes compacted as the temperature, weight and pressure of the cover increase, and water and gases are driven off. The residue, ever richer in carbon, becomes coal.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

In the sea, a similar process takes place. Of the marine life that is eternally falling slowly to the bottom of the sea, vast quantities of it are eaten, some is oxidized, but a portion of the microscopic animal and plant life escapes destruction and is entombed in the mud on the seafloor. The organic debris collects at the bottom and is buried within a growing buildup of sands, clays and more debris until the thickness of sediment attains thousands of feet. Bacteria takes oxygen from the trapped organic residues, breaking them down molecule-by-molecule into substances rich in carbon and hydrogen, and the extreme weight and pressure of the mass compacts the clay into hard shale.

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The generation of hydrocarbons from the source material depends primarily on the temperature to which the organic material is subjected. Hydrocarbon generation appears to be negligible at temperatures less than 150°F (65°C) in the subsurface and reaches a maximum within the range of 225° to 350°F (107° and 176°C), the “hydrocarbon window”. Increasing temperatures convert the heavy hydrocarbons into lighter ones and ultimately to gas. However, at temperatures above 500°F (260°C), the organic material is carbonized and destroyed as a source material. Consequently, if source beds become too deeply buried no hydrocarbons will be produced.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

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Type of Hydrocarbon migration

Primary Migration: Primary migration of petroleum from source to reservoir is caused by the movement of water, which carries oil out of the compacting sediments. When the source mud is deposited it contains 70 to 80 percent water the remainder is solids, such as clay materials, carbonate particles or fine-grained silica. As they build up to great thickness in sedimentary basins, water is squeezed out by the weight of the overlying sediments. Under normal hydrostatic pressure (approximately 0.446 psi/ft), the clays lose porosity and the pore diameters shrink.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

2- Migration from source to reservoirAfter generation, the dispersed hydrocarbons in the fine-grained source rocks must be concentrated by migration to a reservoir. Compaction of the source beds by the weight of the overlying rocks provides the driving force necessary to expel the hydrocarbons and to move them throughout the more porous beds or fractures to regions of lower pressure (which normally means a shallower depth.) Gravity separation of gas, oil and water takes place in reservoir rocks which are usually water-saturated. Consequently, petroleum is forever trying to rise until it is trapped or escapes at the earth's surface. Vertical migration via faults and fractures has led to many of the large oil accumulations, such as that found at shallow depths in the northern Iraq.

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Fluids tend to move toward the lowest potential energy. Initially this is upward, but as compaction progresses there is lateral as well as vertical movement. The lateral movement results primarily from the tendency of the flat clay mineral particles to lie horizontally as they are compressed. This reduces the vertical permeability of the compacting sediments. In addition, the long continuous sands on the edges of basins orient fluid movement laterally as burial progresses, as illustrated in Figure 2-18. The migration of oil from source to reservoir is as follows:

1- Water flows toward the lowest potential energy.2- Clays often have abnormal pressure because they are slow to release water.3- Avenues of migration during basin compaction are:• Sandstones• Unconformities• Fracture-fault systems • biohermal reefs

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

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Primary migration mechanisms

1. Migration by diffusion. Because of differing concentrations of the fluids in the source rock and the surrounding rock there is a tendency to diffuse. A widely accepted theory.

2. Migration by molecular solution in water. While aromatics are most soluble in aqueous solutions, they are rare in oil accumulations, therefore discrediting the general importance of this mechanism, although it may be locally important.

3. Migration along micro fractures in the source rock. During compaction the fluid pressures in the source rock may become so large that spontaneous “hydro-fracing” occurs. A useful if underestimated hypothesis.

4. Oil-phase migration. OM in the source rock provides a continuous oil-wet migration path along which the hydrocarbons diffuse along pressure and concentration gradient. This is a reasonable but unproved hypothesis, good for high TOCs.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

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Secondary Migration: The process in which hydrocarbons move along a porous and permeable layer to its final accumulation is called secondary migration The position of the accumulating pool is affected by several - sometimes conflicting - factors. Buoyancy causes oil to seek the highest permeable part of the reservoir; capillary forces direct the oil into the coarsest-grained portion first, and into successively finer-grained portions later. Any permeability barriers in the reservoir channel will drive the oil into a somewhat random distribution. Oil accumulations in carbonate rock are often erratic because part of the original void spaces have been plugged by minerals introduced from water solutions after rock is formed.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

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The geological activities effects on petroleum accumulation:- In large sand bodies, barriers formed by thin layers of dense shale may

hold the oil at various levels. - When crustal movements of the earth occur, oil pools are shifted away

from the place in which they originally accumulated. - Faults sometimes cut through reservoirs, destroying parts of the pools

or shift them to different depths. - Uplift and erosion bring the pools near the surface where the lighter

hydrocarbons evaporate.- Fracturing of the cap rock allows oil to migrate vertically to shallower

depth.  

Wherever differential pressures exist and permeable openings provide a path, petroleum will move.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

Tertiary migration: the migration of petroleum accumulation which trapped in the reservoir to the surface.

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3- Reservoir rocksThe petroleum liquids and vapors were emitted from these source rocks, moved upward through the sediment pores, and accumulated between the grains of the sediment, or “reservoir rock.” The reservoir rocks often contained water, which then pushed the lighter oil and gas upward until they hit an impermeable rock layer, such as mudstone or salt rock, which becomes a “seal” or “cap rock.” The oil and gas are thus trapped in “reservoir rocks,” usually sandstone or limestone. So petroleum reservoirs aren’t underground pools as is commonly believed. They are actually rocks soaked in oil and gas, just as water is held in a sponge. (The word petroleum comes from the Latin for “rock oil.”) And they’re not alone in that sponge-like home. Other substances such as water, salt, carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide can get trapped in the rocks too. Oil and gas, however, contain mostly two elements: hydrogen and carbon. How those elements are arranged determines the form of the hydrocarbon. For example, natural gas contains the simplest hydrocarbon, methane, while crude oils can be made up of more complex liquid and solid hydrocarbons.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

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Reservoir Rocks Characteristic

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1- Permeability Definition

The Permeability of a rock is the ability of the hydrocarbons to move from one pore to another so the pores of the rock must be connected together.Unless hydrocarbons can move and flow from pore to pore, the hydrocarbons remain locked in place and cannot flow into a well. In addition to porosity and permeability reservoir rocks must also exist in a very special way. To understand how, it is necessary to cross the time barrier and take an imaginary trip back into the very ancient past.

Mud logging training course Level 1 Petroleum Accumulation

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Texture Affecting Permeability (and Porosity as well)

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Increased roundness and sphericity lead to higher permeabilities, In what depositional settings do we find the different grains shown here? Typical occurrences of clay minerals in sandstones

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The clay type can also have a great influence on permeability.Shown are kaolinite (a), chlorite (b), and fibrous illite (c).

How do their distributions and shapes affect permeability’s?The different clay textures on the previous slide lead to dramatically different porosity/permeability relationships.

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Compaction Compaction is particularly strong in rocks with lower grain fractions (the amount that grains constitute of the total solid volume, shown here in fractions of unity, with the rest being fine-grained matrix minerals). Clays and other matrix minerals move under pressure into the pore spaces. The softer grains in greywackes crumble and dislocate to clog the pores. Cementation additionally leads to porosity reduction.

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Porosity

Definition

The porosity of a rock is the percentage of the total volume of the rock that is occupied by interstices (or Porosity is the volume of the non-solid portion of the rock filled with fluids, divided by the total volume of the rock).Nearly all rocks and sediments contain openings called pores or voids, which come in all shapes and sizes. Some of them are too small to be seen with the unaided eye, and the smallest range in size down to the dimensions of molecules. In exceptional cases, they may be many feet across. Materials containing a relatively large proportion of void space are described as porous or said to possess "high porosity". That fraction of the pores through which water can flow is called “effective porosity”. Total porosity may range from near zero to over 50%, depending on the material, while effective porosities are typically somewhat smaller. The picture shows examples of different types of porosity Because of the higher solubility and different geomechanical properties of carbonates compared to sandstones, a much greater variety of pore types is found in them;

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Type of PorositiesPrimary porosity is the porosity developed by the original sedimentation process by which the rock was created. Secondary porosity is created by processes other than primary cementation and compaction of the sediments.An example of secondary porosity can be found in the solution of limestone or dolomite by ground waters, a process which creates vugs or caverns. Fracturing also creates secondary porosity. Dolomitization results in the shrinking of solid rock volume as the material transforms from calcite to dolomite, giving a corresponding increase in porosity.Example of different type of porosity as shown in picture:Intergranular (lime and dolomite grainstone)Intercrystalline (Sucrosic dolomites)Moldic* (moldic oolitic limestone and dolomite grainstone)Matrix or Chalky (Mudstone, Chalks)Moldic or vuggy in addition to matrix (vuggy Packstone and Wackstone)Fracture or fissure porosity* moldic porosity (mouldic porosity) A form of secondary porosity, developed by the preferential dissolution of shell fragments or other particles, to leave empty spaces previously occupied by the particles.