Coupled Studies of Shale Reservoirs Characterization and Simulation

Date
2018-04-19
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Abstract
Coupled studies of characterization and simulation of shale reservoirs are documented in this thesis. The characterization of shale reservoirs includes the description of natural fractures, rock brittleness derived from dipole sonic logs, brittle mineral composition calculated from Elemental Capture Spectroscopy (ECS) logs, and hardness measured on cores. Then a rock fracability index model, based on these rock properties, is generated to constrain stimulated reservoir volumes generated by microseismic events. An enhanced Dubinin-Astakhov (DA) model is also proposed to model methane-shale adsorption under supercritical conditions. Based on reservoir characterization, the Marcellus shale gas and Eagle Ford shale condensate reservoirs simulation models are developed and validated by field data. Effects of uneven proppant distribution, geomechanics, single-component adsorption and matrix permeability are evaluated in the shale gas reservoirs. In terms of the condensate reservoir, roles of multicomponent adsorption and geomechanics are investigated during primary recovery and CO2 enhanced recovery.
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Keywords
Rock Mechanics, Microseismic, Adsorption, Shale Reservoir Simulation, Shale Reservoir Characterization
Citation
Yang, S. (2018). Coupled Studies of Shale Reservoirs Characterization and Simulation (Doctoral thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/31826