RI 6783 Laboratory Investigation Of The Response Of Guard Electrodes In Oil-Well Logging

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
C. I. Pierce
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
44
File Size:
1810 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1966

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines used an electrolytic tank model to investigate the response of guard electrodes of different dimensions under different simulated reservoir conditions. Sandstone disks from the Berea and Connellsville Formations were used as resistive beds in the model, and agar gel or water was used as conductive beds. In the experiments, bed thickness, hole diameter, mud resistivity, and bed resistivity were varied. The guard electrode is an excellent tool for determining true bed resistivity in the thin-bedded oil reservoirs of the Appalachian area. Vertical resolution and resistivity values are good when there is little or no invasion. Resistivity values are near true bed resistivity in beds thicker than about six hole diameters when the electrode-to-hole-diameter ratio is close to 1. However, low-resistivity muds cause false peaks to appear on the logs near bed boundaries in thick beds, and for resistive beds having a thickness approximately three to five times the hole diameter, apparent resistivities tend to be excessively high when mud resistivity is low.
Citation

APA: C. I. Pierce  (1966)  RI 6783 Laboratory Investigation Of The Response Of Guard Electrodes In Oil-Well Logging

MLA: C. I. Pierce RI 6783 Laboratory Investigation Of The Response Of Guard Electrodes In Oil-Well Logging. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1966.

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