Page 139 - Petrophysics
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1 12   PETROPHYSICS: RESERVOIR ROCK PROPERTIES


                    where d,,  is in cm. 1/8 mm = 0.0125 cm.

                              6
                    SVgr =          = 480cm-'
                           (0.0125)


                             -
                       Q3    -   (0.2)3   = 0.0125
                     (1 - $)Z   (1 - 0.2)2
                    Now,  using  the  Kozeny  equation,  3.19,  the  permeability  can  be
                    estimated:






                               1
                                       (0.0125) = 2.71 x  10-'cm  or 2750 mD.
                      = ( Z(0.0125)2)

                    The  Carman-Kozeny  equation  can  also  be  used  to  estimate  the
                     permeability:







                               1
                                       (0.0125) = 1.085 x      cm or  1100 mD.
                       = ( S(0.0125)2)

                     Changing the constant from 2 to 5 yields a 40% change in the value of k.


             CONCEPT OF FLOW UNITS


                       Petroleum  geologists,  engineers,  and  hydrologists  have  long
                     recognized the need  of  defining quasi geological/engineering units to
                     shape  the  description  of  reservoir  zones  as  storage  containers and
                     reservoir conduits for fluid flow. Several authors have various definitions
                     of flow units, which are resultant of the depositional environment and
                     diagenitic process. Bear defined the hydraulic (pore geometrical) unit as
                     the representative elementary volume of the total reservoir rock within
                     which the geological and petrophysical properties of the rock volume are
                     the same [20]. Ebanks defined hydraulic flow units as a mappable portion
                     of the reservoir within which the geological and petrophysical properties
                     that affect the flow of fluid are consistent and predictably different from
                     the properties of other reservoir rock volume [2 11. Hear et al. defined
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