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A rock physics and seismic reservoir characterization study of the Rock Springs Uplift, a carbon dioxide sequestration site in Southwestern Wyoming.

Authors :
Grana, Dario
Verma, Sumit
Pafeng, Josiane
Lang, Xiaozheng
Sharma, Hema
Wu, Wenting
McLaughlin, Fred
Campbell, Erin
Ng, Kam
Alvarado, Vladimir
Mallick, Subhashis
Kaszuba, John
Source :
International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control; Aug2017, Vol. 63, p296-309, 14p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

We present a reservoir geophysics study, including rock physics modeling and seismic inversion, of a carbon dioxide sequestration site in Southwestern Wyoming, namely the Rock Springs Uplift, and build a petrophysical model for the potential injection reservoirs for carbon dioxide sequestration. Our objectives include the facies classification and the estimation of the spatial model of porosity and permeability for two sequestration targets of interest, the Madison Limestone and the Weber Sandstone. The available dataset includes a complete set of well logs at the location of the borehole available in the area, a set of 110 core samples, and a seismic survey acquired in the area around the well. The proposed study includes a formation evaluation analysis and facies classification at the well location, the calibration of a rock physics model to link petrophysical properties and elastic attributes using well log data and core samples, the elastic inversion of the pre-stack seismic data, and the estimation of the reservoir model of facies, porosity and permeability conditioned by seismic inverted elastic attributes and well log data. In particular, the rock physics relations are facies-dependent and include granular media equations for clean and shaley sandstone, and inclusion models for the dolomitized limestone. The permeability model has been computed by applying a facies-dependent porosity-permeability relation calibrated using core sample measurements. The study shows that both formations show good storage capabilities. The Madison Limestone includes a homogeneous layer of high-porosity high-permeability dolomite; the Weber Sandstone is characterized by a lower average porosity but the layer is thicker than the Madison Limestone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17505836
Volume :
63
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126062354
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijggc.2017.06.004