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Insights on gas hydrate formation and growth within an interbedded sand reservoir from well logging at the Qiongdongnan basin, South China Sea.

Authors :
Kang, Dongju
Zhang, Zijian
Lu, Jing'an
Phillips, Stephen C.
Liang, Jinqiang
Deng, Wei
Zhong, Chao
Meng, Dajiang
Source :
Marine Geology. Sep2024, Vol. 475, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Although variable well log resolution and its control on saturation estimation has been studied, it has not been directly applied to a specific location to explore the nature of gas hydrate within a sand reservoir. We applied in-situ measurements of resistivities, neutron porosity, and gamma ray at two sites in the Qiongdongnan Basin, South China Sea (QDN-W05–2021 and QDN-W08–2021) to investigate the reservoir parameters of a hydrate-bearing sand reservoir. Our results show that gas hydrate is distributed in 5 zones with a total thickness of 10.7 m and an average saturation of 69% at the QDN-W05–2021 site, while they are distributed in 2 zones with a total thickness of 4.3 m and an average saturation of 49% at the QDN-W08–2021 site. We found that variances in saturations estimated from lateral-extra deep button (RX), phase shift (P40H-P40L), and attenuation (A40H-A40L) resistivities within the laterally mapped continuous sand body were affected by the nature of gas hydrate occurrences. Results indicate gas hydrate forms and accumulates at the center of the sand layer and tends to be less or not present toward the top and base. Integrated with seismic data, the in-situ measurements provide insights in the evolution of a mushroom-shaped, hydrate-gas reservoir system. In the system, free gas is likely horizontally transported from the top-center of the gas chimney to the surrounding areas in the early stage dominated by a warm-gas environment, whereas hydrate forms in the opposite pathway starting from the surrounding areas in the following stage with temperature reducing. Our study suggests that high-resolution in-situ measurements not only are a tool to identify the physical properties, but also can be used to help explain the physical process of hydrate growth and accumulation. • We identify a hydrate-bearing sand reservoir with multiple thin, horizontal beds. • Mushroom-shape hydrate-gas system via lateral fluid movement from a gas chimney. • Thin, lateral-bedding hydrate layers results in electrical anisotropy. • Thin gas hydrate reservoir shows more pronounced saturation scale effects. • Vertical resolution of resistivity tools influences hydrate saturation estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00253227
Volume :
475
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Marine Geology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179105792
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2024.107343