Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology
Volume 49,
Number 12,
December 2010,
pp. 10-18
Summary
Predicting the performance of in-situ recovery processes in the McMurray
formation is required to optimize development planning and resource management.
These performance predictions are sensitive to many parameters; however,
vertical permeability is perhaps the most critical geological parameter. There
are many challenges associated with the estimation of vertical permeability:
(1) it is difficult to collect representative core measurements, (2) the high
viscosity of the bitumen makes it impossible to perform well testing, (3)
statistical approaches and the notion of representative elementary volumes
(REVs) are challenged by heterogeneities at all scales and (4) the nature of
the heterogeneities is variable within different depositional environments.
This paper summarizes these challenges, then presents a consistent numerical
modelling framework based on core data, core photographs, conventional
well-logs, high-resolution image logs and detailed geological interpretation.
The framework includes: dividing the stratigraphic column into facies with
similar spatial arrangement of sand/shale, constructing high-resolution models
of sand/shale, assigning porosity and permeability to sand/shale, calibrating
the models to direct measurements, solving for effective horizontal and
vertical permeability at the appropriate scale and transferring the results to
geomodelling. This framework is described in detail and demonstrated with
illustrative examples. Considerations for even better results are
discussed.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
20 March 2009
- Meeting paper published:
16 June 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
16 September 2010
- Manuscript approved:
17 September 2010
- Published online:
1 December 2010
- Version of record:
1 December 2010