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Pore modification mechanisms in a deeply buried non-marine sandstone: The Early Cretaceous Upper Sarir Sandstone Formation, Sirte Basin, Libya
- Source :
- Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering. 205:108813
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Critical understanding of the reservoir pore-system is crucial for effective fluid-flow. Core-sedimentological description (40 core plugs), petrography (thin section and scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectrometry), x-ray diffractometry, and high-resolution imaging were integrated to characterize pore-modification processes in a deeply buried (ca. 12470–12558 Ft.) non-marine sandstone. The reservoir is dominantly subrounded to subangular, well-sorted to moderately well-sorted, and medium-to fine-grained quartz arenite and lithearenite. Framework ranges from matrix-supported to matrix-devoided types. With a mean point-counted composition of Q95F0L5, quartz is the dominant mineral in all samples. Core-derived porosity and permeability range from 0.88 to 16.89% (Average 9.99%) and ~0.00–431.06 mD (Average 66.42 mD), respectively. Intergranular (ɸI), micro (ɸμ), fracture (CF), and dissolution (Diss) porosities constitute an estimated 60%, 35%, 3%, and 2% of the total porosity. The pore-spaces are randomly distributed and largely disconnected from one another. Connected pores are linked by necking, tubular, and lamellar pore throats. Pore-destructive diagenetic processes occurred mainly in the early-intermediate diagenetic phase, and to lesser extent in the late diagenetic phase. Pore-enhancement processes were of sparse occurrences. Mechanical compaction, quartz overgrowth development, kaolinitization, sideritization, and calcite cementation are the main pore-occluding processes identified. Quartz overgrowth increased with depth and it shows an inverse relationship with poro-perm. The formation of quartz overgrowth haloes in the Upper Sarir Sandstone Formation were most likely formed from non-insitu silica mobilized into the pore system during post-rift cooling. This study confirms the need for careful heterogeneity modelling even in non-marine deposited reservoir sandstone, notwithstanding their known clean nature in contrast to mud-rich marine reservoirs.
- Subjects :
- Calcite
Thin section
Fracture (mineralogy)
Geochemistry
02 engineering and technology
010502 geochemistry & geophysics
Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Cementation (geology)
01 natural sciences
Quartz arenite
Diagenesis
Petrography
chemistry.chemical_compound
Fuel Technology
020401 chemical engineering
chemistry
0204 chemical engineering
Quartz
Geology
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 09204105
- Volume :
- 205
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........a82b88f7134a0bc45254924b8a3410ad
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.petrol.2021.108813