RI 6093 Physical Properties And Clay Mineral Contents Affecting Susceptibility Of Oil Sands To Water Damage, Powder River Basin, Wyo. ? Summary And Conclusions

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Eliot J. White
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
24
File Size:
4992 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

The physical properties and clay mineral content of the major oil-producing formations in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming were determined by analyses of cores from 100 wells. Interrelationships were established among permeability, restored water saturation, clay content, and bulk swelling capacity of the crushed sample and used to estimate the susceptibility of the formations to water damage. The ratio of water permeability to gas permeability (kw/ki) offers a convenient scale for semiquantitatively estimating the water sensitivity of sands. The irreducible water saturation was also found to have a similar relationship to the clay mineral content and the water sensitivity of the sands. The average relation of water permeability to gas permeability is different for each sand, as shown by the curves, and the relative positions of the curves indicate the degree of water sensitivity of each sand from which the susceptibility to water damage may be estimated. How accurately these estimates show formation behavior under field operations will not be known until studies of field performance can be made. The water permeabilities of the Muddy, Minnelusa, and Tensleep sands average about the same as the gas permeabilities, and these sands are classified as insensitive. The water permeabilities of the Sussex and Shannon sands, at the other extreme, are much less than the gas permabilities [when average ki is 30 millidarcys (md), kw is 6.1 md], and these sands are classified as highly water sensitive. The sensitivities of the five other sands are between these extremes.
Citation

APA: Eliot J. White  (1962)  RI 6093 Physical Properties And Clay Mineral Contents Affecting Susceptibility Of Oil Sands To Water Damage, Powder River Basin, Wyo. ? Summary And Conclusions

MLA: Eliot J. White RI 6093 Physical Properties And Clay Mineral Contents Affecting Susceptibility Of Oil Sands To Water Damage, Powder River Basin, Wyo. ? Summary And Conclusions. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1962.

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