An Integrated Approach for Closure Correction of Mercury Injection Capillary Pressure Measurements

38 Pages Posted: 20 Dec 2022

See all articles by Ahmed Kasha

Ahmed Kasha

University of Houston

Michael Myers

University of Houston

Lori Hathon

University of Houston

Ahmad Sakhaee-Pour

University of Houston

Fadhil Sadooni

Qatar University

Mustafa Nasser

Qatar University

Ibnelwaleed A. Hussein

Qatar University

Hamad A.Rahman S A Al-kuwari

Qatar University

Abstract

Closure correction is a key requirement for a reliable petrophysical evaluation using mercury injection capillary pressure (MICP). The available correction methods rely on identifying deflection points on capillary pressure curves which is often difficult and subjective and requires additional information for macropores that control the closure effect. We propose a new approach that integrates the pore-throat size distribution and incremental mercury intrusion data from MICP with porosity from routine core analysis as well as 2D visualization and watershed segmentation from thin section images. The proposed approach allows for lowering the uncertainty in closure correction by incorporating the pore-throat sizes and segmented porosity of the macropores from thin section images. We tested this approach on samples of the Austin Chalk and Indiana Limestone. The effects of sample size and equilibrium time were also investigated. Identifying the closure pressure is demonstrated to be more difficult on small, crushed samples due to the impact of mercury conformance associated with the increased specific surface area. The impact of increasing the equilibrium time is insignificant on relatively permeable Austin Chalk. However, for the tighter Indiana Limestone, conducting fast MICP experiments results in inconsistent and misleading results. Using initial-residual curves, we show that Austin Chalk pores are fully intruded below 10,000 psia whereas Indiana Limestone requires higher pressure to invade all of the pore systems. This study emphasizes the importance of integrating additional information with the MICP data for the closure correction of complex pore systems.

Keywords: Closure correction, Mercury injection, carbonates, Capillary pressure, Pore-throat size distribution, Sample size, Equilibrium time

Suggested Citation

Kasha, Ahmed and Myers, Michael and Hathon, Lori and Sakhaee-Pour, Ahmad and Sadooni, Fadhil and Nasser, Mustafa and Hussein, Ibnelwaleed A. and A.Rahman S A Al-kuwari, Hamad, An Integrated Approach for Closure Correction of Mercury Injection Capillary Pressure Measurements. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4308129 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4308129

Ahmed Kasha

University of Houston ( email )

4800 Calhoun Road
Houston, TX 77204
United States

Michael Myers (Contact Author)

University of Houston ( email )

4800 Calhoun Road
Houston, TX 77204
United States

Lori Hathon

University of Houston ( email )

4800 Calhoun Road
Houston, TX 77204
United States

Ahmad Sakhaee-Pour

University of Houston ( email )

4800 Calhoun Road
Houston, TX 77204
United States

Fadhil Sadooni

Qatar University ( email )

Mustafa Nasser

Qatar University ( email )

College of Law
Qatar University
Doha, 2713
Qatar

Ibnelwaleed A. Hussein

Qatar University ( email )

College of Law
Qatar University
Doha, 2713
Qatar

Hamad A.Rahman S A Al-kuwari

Qatar University ( email )

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