of faults

Report 6 Downloads 202 Views
Geomechanical analysis of sealing capacity and seismicity of faults Jan ter Heege

Glarus thrust fault, Swiss Alps

2/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Faults determine hydrocarbon accumulation S

N

TWT Buang-1 S

N

Corallina-1 BPLI

BPLI

TM1

high strain reactivated bounding faults

TM1

TM3 TM3

TE TE

From Gartrell et al., APPEA Journal 2005, modified for DFS by Clennell (CSIRO)

Juxtaposition seals, SGR > 60% KC 77 m oil column

no oil

KA

JO JO

non-leaking bounding fault 2000m 2000m

Example Timor Sea, Australia

KC KA

3/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Conventional techniques to determine the sealing capacity of faults and some of their limitations

4/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Shale gouge ratio can be used to determine sealing capacity of faults without considering stress state Analysis for entire fault section across slipped interval

Throw, T

Shale

SGR= (Vsh.z) / T x 100%

Sand

Vsh5, z5

Slipped interval (T) Photo: G Skerlec

Vsh4, z4 Vsh3, z3 Vsh2, z2 Vsh1, z1

Outcrop data (meter scale)

after Yielding et al. 1997

5/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

SGR extensively calibrated using reservoir well pressures, but poorly constrained (SGRcrit =10-20%)

Yielding et al. 1997

6/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Better predictions of the sealing capacity of faults using integrated experimental-modelling studies

Brecht Wassing

Silvio Giger

Bogdan Orlic

Ben Clennell

7/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Integrated experimental-modelling studies provide new data on the sealing capacity of faults ~4 m

Large rig to produce experimental clay smears in large samples (24x12x15 cm) at realistic stress conditions (n= 8 MPa) from Giger (CSIRO)

8/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Experiments simulated by discrete element models to determine SGR vs. shale properties and normal stress normal stress

normal stress

“fault zone”

displacement

synthetic shale: Vshale + mechanical properties synthetic & natural sandstone

matching mechanical properties

9/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Integrated experimental-modelling studies provide new data on the sealing capacity of faults

10/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Integrated experimental-modelling studies provide new data on the sealing capacity of faults 1 0.9

shale content (V shale )

SGR=20%

dip angle fault: 60º shale layer thickness: 10 m

transition zone

0.7 faults sealing

0.6

SGR=10%

shale1

n=20 MPa

0.8

n=10 MPa shale2

schematic! ?

0.5 0.4

faults leaking

0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0

20

from geological model

40

60

80

fault displacement (D)

100

120

11/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Conventional techniques to determine fault reactivation and induced leakage and seismicity

(sources: TNO, KNMI – Royal NL Meteorological Institute, Ministry of Econ. Affairs)

12/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Better predictions of strength and sealing capacity of faults by integrating experimental data and models 0.4

Mohr-Coulomb failure total stress effective stress more stable after injection less stable after injection stable fault orientations stable fault orientations stable fault orientations critically-stressed orientations

m=0.6

m=1.0

Mohr diagram

t/Sv

0.3

0.2

high n low n

0.1

-aP 0 0

0.1

0.2

s'hmin

0.3

s'Hmax

0.4

s'v 0.5 s n/Sv

0.6

0.7

0.8

Shmin

SHmax

4

4

slip tendency: shear stress/normal stress (/n)

0.9

1

Sv

3

13/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Slip tendency can be mapped on fault planes to determine critically stressed (leaking) fault segments 0.4

m=0.6

m=1.0

t/Sv

0.3

0.2

high n

Mohr-Coulomb failure total stress effective stress more stable after injection less stable after injection stable fault orientations stable fault orientations stable fault orientations critically-stressed orientations

low n

0.1

-aP 0 0

0.1

0.2

s'hmin

0.3

s'Hmax

0.4

s' 0.5v s n/Sv

0.6

0.7

Shmin

0.8

SHmax

0.9

1

Sv

14/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Full field finite element models can account for local geology in predicting fault reactivation Feasibility of CO2 storage in the depleted De Lier gas field (onshore NL)

Structural geological model

Input to FEM

- rock properties - constitutive material models - in situ stress

NE GWC

Pressure load from reservoir simulator Pressure load for DIANA Static pressure

SW

N

Extrapolated pressure

Pressure [bar]

2D FE Model

Simulated pressure Pressure in DIANA

Time [year]

3 km

Enlarged FE model

10 km

Location of monitoring points Fault

Stacked reservoirs

Fault

Caprock

143 145 148

Aquifers

Bogdan Orlic (TNO)

15/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Variation in local stress due to CO2 injection can result in reactivation of fault segments Possible stress paths for the Bounding Fault for injection (el.143)

Location of monitoring points Fault

143 145 148

Shear traction [MPa]

25

Reversible stress path (elastic response) Partially reversible stress path Irreversible stress path (rigid response) Stress before injection Stress after injection MC: c=0, ф=35°

20 15

Fault re-activation? 10 5 0 0

5 10 15 20 Normal effective traction [MPa]

25

Bogdan Orlic (TNO)

16/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Better predictions of fault reactivation and induced seismicity using experimental + modelling studies

17/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Better methods to determine strength (friction coefficient) of faults 0.4

m=0.6

m=1.0

?

t/Sv

0.3

0.2

high n

Mohr-Coulomb failure total stress effective stress more stable after injection less stable after injection stable fault orientations stable fault orientations stable fault orientations critically-stressed orientations

low n

0.1

-aP 0 0

0.1

0.2

s'hmin

0.3

s'Hmax

0.4

s'v 0.5 s n/Sv

0.6

0.7

Shmin

0.8

SHmax

0.9

1

Sv

18/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Integrating experimental-outcrop-modelling studies to couple fault composition, strength, and permeability from geological model

log k f   4  SGR 

Crawford et al. 2008

1 4

 log( D )(1  SGR )

5

19/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Integrating experimental-outcrop-modelling studies to couple fault composition, strength, and permeability

Strong leaking fault segments

map in geological model to determine spill points

Weak sealing fault segments Crawford et al. 2008

20/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Integrating experimental-outcrop-modelling studies to couple fault composition, strength, and permeability

Gerco Hoedeman (TNO)

21/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences

Better predictions of induced seismicity velocity weakening faulting regimes (experiments) in models fault reactivation ≠ seismicity !! more “clay”

no seismicity

seismicity

But, does this apply to reservoir-bounding faults?

Niemeijer & Spiers 2007 (UU)

22/24 13 February 2012 Jan ter Heege TNO Petroleum Geosciences