2021 •
Comparison of Petrophysical Properties of Porous Rocks Using NMR, Micro-CT, and Fluid Flow Simulations
Authors:
Apoorv Jyoti, Ralf Haese
Abstract:
Micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) is increasingly utilized to image the pore network and to derive petrophysical properties in combination with modelling software. The effect of micro-CT image resolution and size on the accuracy of the derived petrophysical properties is addressed in this study using a relatively homogenous sandstone and a heterogenous, highly porous bioclastic limestone. Standard laboratory procedures including NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) analysis, micro-CT analysis at different image resolutions and sizes and pore-sca (...)
Micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) is increasingly utilized to image the pore network and to derive petrophysical properties in combination with modelling software. The effect of micro-CT image resolution and size on the accuracy of the derived petrophysical properties is addressed in this study using a relatively homogenous sandstone and a heterogenous, highly porous bioclastic limestone. Standard laboratory procedures including NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) analysis, micro-CT analysis at different image resolutions and sizes and pore-scale flow simulations were used to determine and compare petrophysical properties. NMR-derived pore-size distribution (PSD) was comparable to the micro-CT-derived PSD at a resolution of 7 µm for both the rock types. Porosity was higher using the water saturation method as compared to the NMR method in both rocks. The resolution did not show a significant effect on the porosity of the homogeneous sandstone, but porosity in the heterogeneous limestone varies depending on the location of the sub-sample. The transport regime in the sandstone was derived by simulations and changed with the resolution of the micro-CT image. The transport regime in the sandstone was advection-dominated at higher image resolution and diffusion-dominated when using a lower image resolution. In contrast, advection was the dominant transport regime for the limestone based on simulations using higher and lower image resolutions. Simulation-derived permeability for a 400 Voxel3 image at 7 µm resolution in the Berea sandstone matched laboratory results, although local heterogeneity within the rock plays an integral role in the permeability estimation within the sub-sampled images. The simulation-derived permeability was highly variable in the Mount Gambier limestone depending on the image size and resolution with the closest value to a laboratory result simulated with an image resolution of 2.5 µm and a size of 300 Voxel3. Overall, the study demonstrates the need to decide on micro-CT parameters depending on the type of petrophysical property of interest and the degree of heterogeneity within the rock types. (Read More)
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