Aguilera 2014
Aguilera 2014
Aguilera 2014
Stage:
Page: 190
Total Pages: 19
Summary
Core data from various North American basins with the support of
limited amounts of data from other basins around the world have
shown in the past that process speed or delivery speed (the ratio of
permeability to porosity) provides a continuum between conventional, tight-, and shale-gas reservoirs (Aguilera 2010a). This work
shows that the previous observation can be extended to tight-oil
and shale-oil reservoirs. The link between the various hydrocarbon
fluids is provided by the word petroleum in the total petroleum
system (TPS), which encompasses liquid and gas hydrocarbons
found in conventional, tight, and shale reservoirs.
Results of the present study lead to distinctive flow units for
each type of reservoir that can be linked empirically to gas and oil
rates and, under favorable conditions, to production decline. To
make the work tractable, the bulk of the data used in this paper
has been extracted from published geologic and petroleum-engineering literature.
The paper introduces an unrestricted/transient/interlinear transition flow period in a triple-porosity model for evaluating the rate
performance of multistage-hydraulically-fractured (MSHF) tightoil reservoirs. Under ideal conditions, this flow period is recognized
by a straight line with a slope of 1.0 on log-log coordinates. However, the slope can change (e.g., to 0.75), depending on reservoir
characteristics, as shown with production data from the Cardium
and Shaunavon formations in Canada. This interlinear flow period
has not been reported previously in the literature because the standard assumption for MSHF reservoirs has been that of a pseudosteady-state transition between the linear flow periods.
It is concluded that there is a significant practical potential in
the use of process speed as part of the flow-unit characterization
of unconventional petroleum reservoirs. There is also potential for
the evaluation of production-decline rates by the use of the tripleporosity model presented in this study.
Introduction
Different hydrocarbons and reservoir types can be integrated
under the umbrella of a TPS. That is the premise for being able to
integrate, in this paper, flow units of conventional, tight-gas,
shale-gas, tight-oil, and shale-oil reservoirs and to estimate potential production rates. A previous paper (Aguilera 2010a) described
flow units in tight- and shale-gas reservoirs. That material is
extended in this work to the cases of tight oil and shale oil.
The names TPS (Magoon and Schmoker 2000) and petroleum
system (Magoon and Beaumont 1999) are used interchangeably
in the literature. The TPS is a unifying concept that encompasses
all the disparate elements and processes of petroleum geology
including a pod of active source rock and all genetically related
oil and gas accumulations.
The TPS includes all the geologic elements and processes
required for an oil-and-gas accumulation to exist. The word
petroleum includes high concentrations of any of the following
C 2014 Society of Petroleum Engineers
Copyright V
This paper (SPE 165360) was accepted for presentation at the SPE Western Regional &
AAPG Pacific Section Meeting, 2013 Joint Technical Conference, Monterey, California, USA,
1925 April 2013, and revised for publication. Original manuscript received for review 16 April
2013. Revised manuscript received for review 27 November 2013. Paper peer approved 16
December 2013.
190
substances: thermal and biological hydrocarbon gas found in conventional reservoirs, as well as in unconventional reservoirs (gas
hydrates, tight reservoirs, fractured shales, and coal); condensates;
crude oils; and natural bitumen. The word system describes the
interdependent elements and processes that form the functional
unit that creates hydrocarbon accumulations.
Magoon and Beaumont (1999) indicate that the essential elements of a TPS include the following: source rock, reservoir rock,
seal rock, and overburden rock. The TPS includes two processestrap formation and generation/migration/accumulation of
hydrocarbons. These essential elements and processes must be
correctly placed in time and space so that organic matter included
in a source rock can be converted into a petroleum accumulation.
A TPS exists wherever all these essential elements and processes
are known to occur or are thought to have a reasonable chance or
probability to occur.
The segments of the TPS described previously, dealing with
conventional and unconventional oil and gas reservoirs, are the
primary objectives of this paper. The significant paradigm shift is
that tight rocks that could not produce any petroleum in the past
or were nearly impermeable seals are now economical reservoir
rocks.
Several researchers (Archie 1950; Kwon and Pickett 1975;
MacKenzie 1975; Chopra et al. 1987; Ebanks 1987; Gunter et al.
1997a,b; Hartmann and Beaumont 1999; Nelson 2009; Clarkson
et al. 2012) have discussed the importance of pore and throat
structure (e.g., size, geometry, distribution, connectivity, and
composition) with respect to the flow unit and storage capacity of
porous media. Pore-throat apertures have been estimated on the
basis of knowledge of process speed [i.e., the ratio of permeability
to porosity (Kolodzie 1980; Aguilera 2002)]. In turn, these porethroat apertures have been used with reasonable success to anticipate flow rates that can be expected from given oil (Martin et al.
1997) or gas (Deng et al. 2011) wells. In general, this type of
work has been performed in the past in conventional carbonate
and siliciclastic reservoirs, and, more recently, in tight-gas and
shale-gas reservoirs. This paper shows, with the use of real data,
that the same concept can be extended quantitatively to the cases
of tight-oil and shale-oil reservoirs. To achieve that, data from
several conventional reservoirs around the world, from tight-gas
and from shale-gas reservoirs, and tight and oil reservoirs primarily in North America are examined in this study.
Aguilera (2010a) has indicated that tight-gas reservoirs are
best represented by at least dual-porosity models, whereas shalegas reservoirs are best represented by at least quadruple-porosity
models and more rigorously by quintuple-porosity models (Lopez
and Aguilera 2013). The approach permits estimating volumes of
petroleum in place that are larger than considered previously
(Aguilera 2010a), differentiating between viscous- and diffusiondominated flow in gas reservoirs and the contribution of each flow
mechanism with the use of a unified diffusion-/viscous-flow
model (Rahmanian et al. 2013). It must be noted, however, that
smaller volumes of original gas in place (OGIP) than those considered previously have also been discussed in the literature
(Ambrose et al. 2010).
An important component of the multiple porosities mentioned
previously is provided by natural fractures. All unconventional
reservoirs have to be hydraulically fractured. However, the tightgas, shale-gas, tight-oil, and shale-oil reservoirs with the best
May 2014 SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Endowment
Present
10 md
0.1 md
Increasing:
Decreasing:
Production
Costs and
Prices
Delivery
Speed
(k/)
Activation
Indexes
Pore
Throat
Apertures
Research
Unconventional Gas
Stage:
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Time
Future
Tight Gas
Shales Gas
CBM
Gas Hydrates
Present
Gravity
45 API
Endowment
30 API
Increasing:
Decreasing:
Production
Costs and
Prices
Oil Mobility
(k/)
Activation
Indexes
15 API
Unconventional Oil
Research
Time
2
0.1
Oil sands
Tight Oil
(bituminous sands)
2
0.1
Future
Heavy Oil
Oil Shale
Bottom of Resource Pyramid Unknown
lct @p
; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
k=/ @t
191
1.E+00
1
0.55
micro
0.2
meso
1.E01
macro
Knudsen
1s
100s
0.1s
10s
0.01s
1s
1.0s
100s
0.1s
50s
0.05s
10s
0.01s
5s
0.005s
1s
1.E02
0.04
1.E04
0.01
1.E05
0.003
1.E06
0.0004
1.E07
1.E08
1.E03
nano
Permeability (mD)
100s+
MSHF Horizontal
1.E+01
10s
MMscfd
Mbopd
1.E+02
Total Pages: 19
Vertical Wells
20
10
Page: 192
MMscfd
1.E+03
Viscous Flow
rp35
mega
1.E+04
Mbopd
Stage:
0.00008
1.E09
1.E10
0
10
15
20
25
30
Porosity (%)
Source: GFREE Research Team, U of Calgary, 2013.
Fig. 2(a) Flow units as a function of pore-throat radii (rp35) in micrometers, porosities (%), and permeabilities (md); and possible
ranges of oil rates (thousands of BOPD) for vertical wells published by Martin et al. (1997) and gas-flow rates (millions of scf/D) for
vertical wells published by Deng et al. (2011). Figure includes possible ranges of oil and gas rates for MSHF horizontal wells. All
the rates are only approximations and can be affected by individual rock characteristics. For example, the presence of well-developed natural fractures in the Bakken can increase the oil rates shown in the figure. The Knudsen number allows distinguishing
between viscous and diffusion-like flow in tight- and ultratight-gas reservoirs. However, the scale presented in Fig. 26 is only for
pore-throat apertures (not for Knudsen values).
data had been used originally by Kwon and Pickett (1975) for creating a pore-structure model and developing pore-structure
interrelationships.
Pore-size classes are grouped on the basis of pore-throat (port)
apertures as megaports (rp35 > 10 mm), macroports (2.5 to 10
mm), mesoports (0.5 to 2.5 mm), microports (0.1 to 0.5 mm), and
nanoports (0.01 to 0.1 mm) by following approximations suggested by Martin et al. (1997). Note that port prefixes (mega,
macro, meso, micro, nano), as used customarily in the geologic
literature, do not correspond to the mathematical meaning of such
prefixes.
Fig. 2a shows a crossplot of permeability vs. porosity for various pore-size classes (rp35) that include conventional, tight, and
shale petroleum reservoirs, and possible rates that can be
obtained from vertical oil wells (Martin et al. 1997) and vertical
gas wells (Deng et al. 2011). The figure also includes direct
observations of possible oil and gas rates that can be obtained
from MSHF horizontal wells. The figure suggests that if MSHF
horizontal wells with smaller rp35 are producing much better than
vertical wells with larger rp35, there is significant potential to
increase the rates and ultimate recoveries from some of those reservoirs with a larger rp35 with innovative drilling and stimulation
technologies as have been performed in tight and shale petroleum
systems.
However, all the rates in Fig. 2a are only approximations that
should be used with care because the rates can be affected by individual rock and fluid characteristics. Note in Eq. 1 that not only
does process speed play an important role in fluid flow but so also
do total compressibility (which can be affected significantly by
192
rp35
10
100
4
2
10
1
1
0.5
0.2
0.1
0.01
0.001
0.025
0.014
nanoports
0.04
microports
0.1
Total Pages: 19
0.0001
AA
A A
AA A A
A
A A A
A
A
A A
A A
AA
A A A BA
A
A
B
A
B
B
BA B
B
B
B
B
B
B B B
B BBB B
B BB
B
B
B
B
B
BBB B BB B BB
B
B
B
B
BC C
B
B
CC C
C
C C
CC
C
C
C C
C CC
C C CCCC
C
CCC
C CC
C
C
CC C
C
C CCD
DDDCD
D D DD
C D D
D
D
DD D
DD
DD D
D
D
D D
D D DD
DD
D DD
DD D DD
D
D
D
PENNSYLVANIA
SANDSTONES
AND
CONGLOMERATES,
OKLAHOMA
A = TYPE IA
B
B = TYPE IB
C = TYPE IC
D = TYPE ID
= TYPE II
+ = TYPE III
= CONGLOM
100
GAS PERMEABILITY MILLIDARCIES
20
1000
Page: 193
1000
megaports macroports mesoports
10000
Stage:
10
1.0
0.1
0.01
0.00001
0.001
3
0.000001
0
10
15
20
Porosity (%)
rt : 1 4 micro meters
rt : 0.05 0.5 micro meters
25
30
7
10
15
POROSITY PERCENT
20
30
193
10000
Total Pages: 19
rp35
microns
4.5
IA
E
TYP
2.3
B
I
PE
10
TY
TYPE ID
IC
P
TY
TYPE II
TYPE III
0.5
0.05
0.01
10
15
20
Porosity (%)
25
microports
0.1
mesoports
2
1
30
Sneider et al. rock types can be properly placed into separate flow
units on the basis of the rp35 values. In this case, the rp35 template
captures properly the general tendency of permeability to
decrease with porosity for each rock type. The Type III rock could
not produce commercially when Sneider et al. published their paper, in 1983. These types of tight rocks, however, are now capable
of commercial production in several places in Canada and the
United States, thanks to technological innovations that include
horizontal drilling and multistage hydraulic fracturing.
Another conventional oil example is provided by the prolific
Cardium sandstone in Canada with the use of data published by
MacKenzie (1975) for the Pembina oil field. As in the previous
case, as far as I know, MacKenzies data have never been evaluated with the rp35 method. Fig. 5 shows MacKenzies data on the
rp35 template for his Type I, Type II, and Type III rocks. Note that
MacKenzies definitions of Types I, II, and III are different from
the definitions presented by Sneider et al. (1983). I retain their
original definitions in this paper to maintain consistency with their
work. What is important, from a practical point of view, is that in
both cases the rp35 values allow one to distinguish clearly unique
flow units in the Elk City (United States) and Pembina (Canada)
oil fields. On Fig. 4, the porosity and permeability data are presented as published by Sneider et al. (1983) without any modifications. The same holds true for Type I and Type II rocks published
by MacKenzie (1975).
The ranges of porosity and permeability for Cardium tight
rocks (equivalent to MacKenzies Type III) represented by open
squares in Fig. 5 were published by Hamm and Struyk (2011).
MacKenzie (1975) indicated that rocks with k// smaller than
0.05 corresponded to tight/nonproductive rock. From Eq. 2, a
value of k// equal to 0.05 corresponds to a pore radius (rp35)
equal to 0.69 mm. This value is represented by the green-dashed
line in Fig. 5. The comparison between the results of MacKenzies cutoff value, published in 1975, and the ranges of porosity
and permeability for tight Cardium rocks, published by Hamm
and Struyk in 2011, is truly remarkable. MacKenzie published a
figure with values of k// for Type III rocks but not separate values of porosity and permeabilities. Thus, the open circles for
Type III rocks in Fig. 5 are limited by the porosity and permeability ranges published by Hamm and Struyk (2011). The tight-oil
Cardium rocks, previously noncommercial, are now commercial
1.0E+02
Type I
Permeability (mD)
macroports
Permeability (mD)
15
megaports
E
ERAT
)
GLOM
CON CIRCLES
(RED
100
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rp35
1000
0.001
Stage:
1.0E+01
Type II
1.0E+00
1.8
0.69
Type III
1.0E01
F
HR, B
1.0E02
0.20
0.04
1.0E03
0
12 15 18 21 24 27 30
Porosity
1.0E02
Permeability (mD)
rp35
microns
0.04
1.0E03
FAYETTVILLE
0.025
HORN RIVER
BARNETT
1.0E04
0.014
SOFT SHALES
1.0E05
0
10
12
14
16
Porosity
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1.0E+01
rp35
microns
NIKANASSIN CORE
1.0E+00
0.55
1.0E01
Permeability (mD)
NIKANASSIN CUTTINGS
0.15
1.0E02
0.04
1.0E03
F
0.025
HR, B
1.0E04
0.014
SOFT SHALES
UTICA
1.0E05
0
10
12
14
16
Porosity
Fig. 7Permeability vs. porosity crossplot including shale data from Horn River (HR) and soft shales in Canada and from the
Fayetteville (F) and Barnett (B) in the United States, also shown on Fig. 6. The red dots in the upper part of the figure represent
core data from the Nikanassin tight-gas formation in Canada. The black squares with red crosses in the middle, and the red triangles, are data from Nikanassin drill cuttings (Solano 2010; Ortega and Aguilera 2013).
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1.0E+01
rp35
microns
NIKANASSIN CORE
1.0E+00
Permeability (mD)
0.55
1.0E01
NIKANASSIN CUTTINGS
0.15
1.0E02
UTICA
1.0E03
0.04
F
0.025
HR, B
1.0E04
0.014
SOFT SHALES
UTICA
1.0E05
0
10
12
14
16
Porosity
Fig. 8Permeability vs. porosity crossplot including shale data from Horn River (HR) and soft shales in Canada and from the
Fayetteville (F) and Barnett (B) in the United States, also shown on Fig. 6. The red dots in the upper part of the figure represent
core data from the Nikanassin tight-gas formation in Canada. The black squares with red crosses in the middle, and the red triangles, are data from Nikanassin drill cuttings (Solano 2010; Ortega and Aguilera 2013). The yellow circles represent data from the
Utica shale in Quebec (Lavoie et al. 2011).
son Rowdy were extracted from Almanza (2011). The big, red triangle highlights sweet spot properties (permeability 0.15 md,
porosity 6%) in the Bakken, as established by Sonnenberg
(2011). In this case, porosity and permeability can be much larger
as a result of dolomitization, natural fractures, and slot porosity.
Note also that porosities and permeabilities tend to be larger in the
shallower Saskatchewan Bakken in Canada. However, because of
the lack of natural fractures, the productivity of the Bakken Saskatchewan wells is generally smaller than the productivity of the
Bakken North Dakota wells. For comparison, Fig. 10 also includes
data from Horn River (HR) and soft shales in Canada and from
the Fayetteville and Barnett in the United States, included previously in Fig. 6. Different pore-throat apertures (rp35) are clearly
delineated.
Fig. 11 shows a crossplot of permeability vs. porosity for Cardium conventional oil reservoirs of Type I and Type II compared
with Cardium tight-oil reservoir (Type III). The data for Types I,
II, and III, published originally by MacKenzie (1975) and Hamm
and Struyk (2011), were also highlighted in Fig. 5. The Cardium
conventional reservoir has been one of the most prolific in Canada. Most recently, the tight-oil Cardium has been coming of
age. The variation in pore-throat aperture (rp35) can be associated
with different production profiles discussed later in this paper.
Fig. 11 highlights differences in pore-throat apertures between
Ma
De
diso
vo
nia
nG
Charles Formation
rou
ole
gep
Source Rock
(Upper and Lower Shales)
Lod
Bakken
Three Forks
Reservoirs:
Middle Bakken & Three Forks
MATURITY
Nisk
Overpressure
Source Beds:
Upper & Lower Bakken Shales
Fig. 9Cross section of the Bakken petroleum system showing approximate maturity levels (Sonnenberg 2011). It is likely that
some of the oil generated in the Bakken in North Dakota migrated north (contrary to this page) to the Canadian Bakken.
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rp35
microns
1.0E+02
4.5
1.0E+01
1.8
SASK
1.0E+00
0.55
Permeability (mD)
BRUTUS
1.0E01
FOGHORN
0.22
JACKSON
1.0E02
0.09
0.04
1.0E03
0.025
0.014
HR, B
1.0E04
0.004
1.0E05
1.0E06
0
12
15
18
21
24
27
30
Porosity
Fig. 10Permeability vs. porosity crossplot for the Bakken tight-oil reservoir in the United States and Canada. The big, red triangle
highlights sweet spot properties in the Bakken, as established by Sonnenberg (2011). Data for the Foghorn, Brutus, and Jackson
pools were extracted from Almanza (2011). In the Bakken, porosity and permeability can be larger because of dolomitization as in
the Elm Coulee, Parshall, and Sanish pools. The figure also includes, for comparison, shale data from Horn River (HR) in Canada
and from the Fayetteville (F) and Barnett (B) in the United States, also shown in Fig. 6.
the Cardium and shale-gas reservoirs. Each rock type corresponds clearly to different flow units. The data for the shale-gas
reservoirs, shown initially in Fig. 6, include those of the Horn
River in Canada and the Fayetteville and Barnett in the United
States.
Fig. 12 includes permeability and porosity data from the Monterey shale in California. Some data were published by Freeman
and Eller (2010) and were sourced from Venoco and Occidental.
The Monterey shale is composed of fractured chert and siliceous shales [with a very complex lithology that goes from Opal
rp35
microns
1.0E+02
4.5
Type I
1.8
1.0E+01
Permeability (mD)
Type II
1.0E+00
0.69
Type III
1.0E01
0.20
1.0E02
0.04
1.0E03
0.025
0.014
HR, B
1.0E04
0.004
1.0E05
1.0E06
0
12
15
18
21
24
27
30
Porosity
Fig. 11Permeability vs. porosity crossplot for Cardium conventional oil reservoirs of Type I and Type II in Canada compared with
Cardium tight-oil reservoir (Type III); plot highlights differences in pore-throat apertures. Each rock type corresponds clearly to different flow units. Cardium data extracted from MacKenzie (1975) and Hamm and Struyk (2011). The figure also includes, for comparison, shale data from Horn River (HR) in Canada and from the Fayetteville (F) and Barnett (B) in the United States, also shown
on Fig. 6.
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rp35
microns
1.0E+02
4.5
1
LOWER OXY
1.0E+00
Permeability (mD)
1.8
VENOCO C
1.0E+01
1.0E01
VENOCO A
VENOCO B
UPPER OXY
0.55
MONTEREY
0.09
1.0E02
0.04
0.025
EAGLEFORD?
1.0E03
F
0.014
HR, B
1.0E04
0.004
1.0E05
1.0E06
0
12
15
18
21
24
27
30
Porosity
Fig. 12Permeability vs. porosity crossplot for the Monterey shale in California (source of data: Freeman and Eller 2010). Possible
Eagleford information is included. The figure also shows, for comparison, shale data from Horn River (HR) in Canada and from the
Fayetteville (F) and Barnett (B) in the United States, also shown on Fig. 6.
A (i.e., unaltered diatomite) to Opal CT (i.e., cristobalite tridymite) at larger depths] of the Upper Miocene (Regan 1953). There
are clearly different flow units for the shale-gas and shale-oil reservoirs in Fig. 12. The shale-gas samples show pore-throat radii
(rp35), varying between 0.014 and 0.004 mm. On the other hand,
62.5% of the Monterey samples show rp35 ranging between 0.55
and 2.2 mm, 31.3% between 0.15 and 0.25 mm, and 6.2% between
0.04 and 0.15 mm. Liquids require larger pore-throat apertures for
commercial production because of the larger viscosity of oil as
compared with natural gas. And, the more viscous the oil, the
larger must be the pore-throat apertures required to attain commercial production. In the case of the Monterey, the oil ranges
between less than 6 API and more than 30 API. For comparison
purposes, Fig. 12 also includes the same data shown on Fig. 6 for
the Horn River Basin in Canada; and Fayetteville and the Barnet
shale gas in the United States.
Fig. 13 shows permeability and porosity data developed by
Walls et al. (2011) for the Eagleford shale in Texas by use of an
integrated digital rock physics (DRP) process for analyzing the
rock properties of shales and other unconventional reservoirs. Data
rp35
microns
Permeability (mD)
1.0E+03
WELL A-DRP
10.0
WELL B-GRI-AR-AR
1.0E+02
4.5
1.0E+01
1.8
1.0E+00
0.55
5WELL A-GRI-DS
1.0E01
0.09
1.0E02
EAGLEFORD ?
1.0E03
1.0E04
0.04
0.025
HR, B
0.014
0.004
1.0E05
1.0E06
0
12
15
18
21
24
27
30
Porosity
Fig. 13Permeability vs. porosity crossplot for the Eagleford shale (Wells A-DRP, A-GRI-DS, and B-GRI-AR-AR). Source of data:
Walls et al. (2011). DRP 5 digital rock physics, GRI 5 Gas Research Institute, AR 5 as received, DS 5 Dean-Stark extracted and
dried. Additional possible Eagleford information is included (green triangle). The figure also shows, for comparison, shale data
from Horn River (HR) in Canada and from the Fayetteville (F) and Barnett (B) in the United States, also shown on Fig. 6.
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rp35
microns
1.0E+02
CT I
4.5
MONTEREY
1.8
1.0E+01
CT II
SHENGLI
1
BAKKEN
VP
2 14
CT T
CP
4
SSK
SWEET SPOT
SM
BSASK2
BSASK3
VSK
5
1.0E01
FOGHORN
SHAUNAVON
BSASK1
UTICA
1.0E02
VRW
EAGLEFORD(?)
BRUTUS
JACKSON MARCELLUS
1.0E03
Permeability (mD)
1.0E+00
0.55
0.22
0.09
0.04
0.025
F
0.014
HR, B
1.0E04
1.0E05
0.004
UTICA
UPPER & LOWER B
1.0E06
0
12
15
18
21
24
27
30
Porosity
Fig. 14Composite of permeability vs. porosity crossplot for tight-oil and shale-oil reservoirs suggests pore-throat apertures
(rp35) ranging between approximately 0.09 and 4.5 mm. The figure includes data from the Shengli field (China), Cardium (CT I, CT II,
CT T), Monterey, Shaunavon and Bakken in Saskatchewan (BSASK), Bakken in the US (Foghorn, Brutus, Jackson), and Viking in
Canada (VSK, VRW). Also included are the Marcellus (red squares) and the Utica (two different patterns of yellow circles between
approximately 0.004 and 0.014 mm, and 009 and 0.55 mm). The lower part of the figure presents, for comparison, shale data from
Horn River (HR) in Canada and from the Fayetteville (F) and Barnett (B) in the United States, also shown on Fig. 6. At the bottom of
the figure are data for the Upper and Lower Bakken (B).
that, based on black shale reservoirs in the Utica shale of the St.
Lawrence Lowlands of Quebec (Aguilera 1978), a hypothetical
Utica shale reservoir is proposed in this report for the United
States parts of the Appalachian basin. The Utica Shale reservoirs
in Quebec are self-sourced, fractured, have porous zones that
range in thickness from 5090 ft, and have water saturations that
approach zero. Furthermore, fracture porosity for the Utica Shale
reservoir in Quebec averages 1.4%, and the reservoir pressure is
generally normal (Aguilera 1978). Natural fractures have been
observed in outcrop and in core for the Utica Shale in New York
State (Martin 2005). The 1.4% fracture porosity determined in
1978 compares well with more-recent values published in the literature, including 1.7% for the Marcellus, 1.5% for the Barnett,
and 1.2% for the Haynesville (Wang and Reed 2009). Because the
Utica shale in the US has an area that is larger than the Marcellus
and a thickness that is also larger than the Marcellus (Fig. 15), the
conclusion is reached that the Utica shale has a very large value
of petroleum in place.
Notice in Fig. 14 that the pore-throat apertures (rp35) of the
Marcellus (red squares) and the upper pattern of the Utica (yellow
circles) compare reasonably well. Furthermore, note that the Utica
in the US is underlain by basement rock. On the basis of the
authors experience, there is potential in the basement, if naturally
fractured, because the formation of natural fractures creates dilatancy and a vacuum that tends to suck the fluids (natural gas and
oil) present in the surroundings into the fractures. As in the case
of the Monterey, it is reasonable to anticipate that, with proper
GFREE management, the combination of area, thickness, porosity, permeability, pore-throat apertures, and innovative technology
will most likely lead to a gigantic recovery of unconventional
petroleum (oil and gas) in the Utica shale.
Cumulative-Production Distribution
Although shales are very heterogeneous and have multiple
porosities (Aguilera 2010a; Andrade et al. 2011; Lopez and
Aguilera 2013), the cumulative production of shale-gas reservoirs is significantly and surprisingly more homogeneous than
199
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Total Pages: 19
NY
Pa
Oh
B
NY PA
Sea Level
Mar
cell
us S
Utic
Naturally
10
hale
aS
hal
Fractured
Reservoir?
Basement
20
A
B
30
64
Fig. 15Areal extension and cross section covering the Marcellus (yellow line) and Utica shales (green border) in the United
States. The Utica is thicker and larger than the Marcellus. Furthermore on the basis of the authors experience, there is also potential in the basement, if naturally fractured, because the formation of natural fractures creates a vacuum that tends to suck the fluids
(in this case, oil and natural gas) present in the surroundings. Thus, the Utica shale is a likely sleeping giant below the Marcellus
(Source of maps: King 2014).
pared with shale reservoirs. The result is surprising but corroborated by actual production data. At this time, there are not
enough production data from tight- and shale-oil reservoirs to reach
a conclusion with respect to the distribution of their cumulative oil
production.
Production Rates
The original attempt to correlate production rates and pore-throat
apertures was published by Martin et al. (1997). Pore-size classes
were grouped by these researchers as indicated previously in the
Flow Units section. Martin et al. (1997) indicated that, comparatively, megaports can reach medium-gravity oil-production rates
of tens of thousands of barrels per day if zonal thickness and
other factors are constant, and without mechanical constraints,
macroports can reach thousands of barrels per day, and mesoports
100
BASE
Devon
Burlington
Encana
XTO
Chief
% Cumulative gas
80
60
40
20
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
% Wells
Fig. 16Fractional production-variability plot for the Barnett fractured shale in Texas for various operating companies (Aguilera
2010b).
200
Stage:
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Total Pages: 19
1.00
0.90
0.80
0.70
Area A
Area B
Area C
Area D
Area E
Area F
0.60
to
ue n
d
s
tio
se duc
a
re re
inc ty
e ensi
r
u d
at
rv re
Cu actu
fr
0.50
0.40
0.30
0.20
0.10
0.00
0.00
0.10
0.20
0.30
0.40
0.50
0.60
0.70
0.80
0.90
1.00
80
> 300 Mscfd
70
200300 Mscfd
100200 Mscfd
1 / q (1E6 / scf)
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
Fig. 18Drawdown linear flow for wells producing from Devonian shales connected through natural fractures in an infiniteacting reservoir. The flow rates extend over a 25-year period
without reaching the boundary-dominated flow (Aguilera 1980,
p. 403).
201
BARNETT
q (Mcfd)
q (Mcfd)
1500
1000
500
500
0
0
12
24
36
48
Time (months)
60
72
84
12
24
36
48
Time (months)
60
72
84
FAYETTEVILLE
BARNETT
10000
10000
DOFP_YEAR_2003 25 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2004 68 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2005 129 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2006 107 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2007 168 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2008 218 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2009 123 WELLS
Linear Flow
DOFP_YEAR_2005 8 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2006 53 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2007 118 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2008 173 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2009 115 WELLS
LINEAR FLOW
q (Mcfd)
q (Mcfd)
DOFP_YEAR_2005 8 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2006 53 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2007 118 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2008 173 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2009 115 WELLS
2000
1000
Total Pages: 19
FAYETTEVILLE
2500
DOFP_YEAR_2004 68 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2003 25 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2005 129 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2006 107 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2007 168 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2008 218 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2009 123 WELLS
1500
Page: 202
3000
2500
2000
Stage:
1000
1000
100
100
1
1
10
Time (months)
10
Time (months)
100
100
FAYETTEVILLE
BARNETT
0.010
0.0040
DOFP_YEAR_2004 68 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2003 25 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2005 129 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2006 107 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2007 168 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2008 218 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2009 123 WELLS
Linear Flow
1/q (1/mcfd)
0.0030
0.0025
0.008
1/q (1/Mcfd)
0.0035
DOFP_YEAR_2005 8 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2006 53 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2007 118 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2008 173 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2009 115 WELLS
LINEAR
0.0020
0.006
0.004
0.0015
0.002
0.0010
0.0005
0.000
0
0.0000
0
4
6
Time0.5 (months0.5)
10
3
4
5
Time0.5 (months0.5)
Stage:
Page: 203
Total Pages: 19
WOODFORD
HAYNESVILLE
4000
10000
DOFP_YEAR_2006 32 WELLS
3500
DOFP_YEAR_2007 90 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2008 127 WELLS
3000
DOFP_YEAR_2008 37 WELLS
8000
7000
DOFP_YEAR_2009 56 WELLS
q (Mcfd)
2500
q (Mcfd)
9000
2000
1500
6000
5000
4000
3000
1000
2000
1000
500
0
0
0
0
12
24
36
48
Time (months)
60
72
12
24
36
48
Time (months)
84
60
72
84
HAYNESVILLE
WOODFORD
100000
10000
DOFP_YEAR_2006 32 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2007 90 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2008 127 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2009 56 WELLS
10000
q (Mcfd)
q (Mcfd)
LINEAR FLOW
1000
1000
DOFP_YEAR_2008 37 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2009 238 WELLS
LINEAR FLOW NOT PRESENT
POSSIBLE FRACTURE CLOSURE
100
100
1
10
Time (months)
100
10
100
Time (months)
HAYNESVILLE
WOODFORD
0.0010
0.0040
DOFP_YEAR_2006 32 WELLS
0.0035
0.0008
0.0030
LINEAR FLOW?
DOFP_YEAR_2009 56 WELLS
LINEAR FLOW
0.0025
1/q (1/Mcfd)
1/q (1/Mcfd)
DOFP_YEAR_2008 37 WELLS
DOFP_YEAR_2007 90 WELLS
0.0020
0.0015
0.0010
0.0006
0.0004
0.0002
0.0005
0.0000
0.0000
0
3
4
5
Time0.5 (months0.5)
that there is no damage around the wellbore. For the Barnett shale
(Fig. 19), some wells have clearly reached boundary-dominated
flow. The Fayetteville shale does not reach boundary-dominated
flow, and the Woodford shale might have reached it for the wells
that started production in 2006. The Haynesville response is different. As indicated previously, the log-log crossplot of rate vs.
time yielded a production trend that fell below the 0.5 straight
line. If there were linear flow, the 1/q vs. square root of time
Time0.5 (month0.5)
would extrapolate to a negative value of 1/q. This would be indicative of improved conditions around the wellbore that probably
stem from the overpressured status of the reservoir. The negative
effect, however, is that permeability and porosity decrease as the
net stress on the natural fractures becomes larger.
Thus, the type of flow observed in Barnett, Fayetteville, Woodford, and Haynesville horizontal gas wells is not too dissimilar
203
Stage:
140
150
100
50
0
0
12
18
Months
24
30
H2 2008
H1 2009
100
H2 2009
HI 2010
80
H2 2010
TYPE WELL
60
40
20
12
18
24
Months of Production
30
36
1000
HI 2008
120
36
100
Total Pages: 19
200
Page: 204
10
HI 2008
H2 2008
H1 2009
H2 2009
HI 2010
H2 2010
Transition slope 0.75
TYPE WELL
100
10
1
1
10
Months of Production
1
1
10
Months
100
100
1.E01
HI 2008
1.E01
East Pembina 2009
East Pembina 2010
East Pembina 2011
West Pembina 2009
West Pembina 2010
West Pembina 2011
Type Well
Unrestricted Transition
8.E02
7.E02
6.E02
5.E02
H2 2008
H1 2009
8.E02
H2 2009
7.E02
1/q (1/bopd)
9.E02
1/q (1/bopd)
9.E02
4.E02
HI 2010
H2 2010
6.E02
TYPE WELL
5.E02
Unrestricted Transition
4.E02
3.E02
3.E02
Flowback
2.E02
2.E02
1.E02
1.E02
0.E+00
0.E+00
0
0
10
15
20
10
t0.75
15
20
t0.75
Oil Rates. Hamm and Struyk (2011) have presented very complete data sets for MSHF horizontal wells in the WCSB. Two
cases are presented in this paper in Figs. 23 and 24. On the basis
of the actual production data, they have developed empirical type
curves for various reservoirs with varying types of rock quality.
To generate their average type curves, they shift the production
data of all wells in a given formation to the same starting point.
The upper section in Fig. 23 shows oil-production rates vs. time
for the tight-oil Cardium formation, as published by Hamm and
May 2014 SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
1.E+03
1.E+02
1.E+01
qD
1.E+00
Linear
1.E01
1.E02
Transition
1.E03
1.E04
Linear
1.E05
1.E06
10
E+
1. 09
E+
1. 08
E+
1. 07
E+
1. 06
E+
1. 05
E+
1. 04
E+
1. 03
E+
1. 02
E+
1. 01
E+
1. 00
E+
1. 1
0
E
1. 2
0
E
1. 3
0
E
1. 4
0
E
1.
tD
Decline Rate with Unrestricted InterLinear Transition Flow
Triple Porosity Model Dominated by Linear Flow
1.E+04
Linear Flow (slope = 0.5)
1.E+03
1.E+02
1.E+01
qD
1.E+00
Linear
1.E01
1.E02
Transition
1.E03
1.E04
Linear
1.E05
Stage:
Page: 205
Total Pages: 19
qD 2
s
ptD
:
x0d 1 x0d f tD ; sDd x0t 1 x0t f tD ; sDt
3
1.E06
10
E+
1. 09
E+
1. 08
E+
1. 07
E+
1. 06
E+
1. 05
E+
1. 04
E+
1. 03
E+
1. 02
E+
1. 01
E+
1. 00
E+
1. 01
E
1.
03
02
1.
04
1.
1.
tD
Decline Rate with Unrestricted InterLinear Transition Flow
Triple Porosity Model Dominated by Linear Flow
1.E+03
Linear Flow (slope = 0.5)
1.E+02
1.E+01
qD
1.E+00
1.E01
Linear
1.E02
Transition
1.E03
1.E04
Linear
1.E05
1.E06
10
E+
1. 09
E+
1. 08
E+
1. 07
E+
1. 06
E+
1. 05
E+
1. 04
E+
1. 03
E+
1. 02
E+
1. 01
E+
1. 00
E+
1. 1
0
E
1. 2
0
E
1. 3
0
E
04
E
1.
1.
tD
Sf
Sf
; xt
: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Sf Smd
Sf Smt
The fracture storage (Sf) is the product (/cth) for the fractures,
Smd is the product (/cth) for one matrix (or medium), and Smt is
the product (/cth) for the other matrix (or medium) in the tripleporosity reservoir. The dimensionless hydraulic diffusivity for the
dual- and triple-porosity media are given by gDd gf /gmd and
gDt gf /gmt. In the case of gas reservoirs, the storages are calculated at initial pressure.
205
Stage:
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Total Pages: 19
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