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A Closer Look at Pore Geometry

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A Closer Look at Pore Geometry

X-ray computed tomography has advanced the field of medicine for more than 30 years.
For nearly as long, it has also been a valuable tool for geoscientists. Improvements in
the technology are helping geoscientists uncover greater detail in the internal pore
structure of reservoir rock and achieve a better understanding of conditions that
affect production.

Andreas Kayser
Cambridge, England

Mark Knackstedt
The Australian National University
Canberra, Australia

Murtaza Ziauddin
Sugar Land, Texas, USA

For help in preparation of this article, thanks to


Veronique Barlet-Gouédard, Gabriel Marquette,
Olivier Porcherie and Gaetan Rimmelé, Clamart, France;
Bruno Goffé, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris; and
Rachel Wood, The University of Edinburgh, Scotland.
Inside Reality and iCenter are marks of Schlumberger.

Information gained through core analysis is The wealth of information obtained from
invaluable for predicting the producibility of a cores comes at a price. Coring often increases rig
reservoir pay zone. While other methods enable time, lowers penetration rates and increases the
petrophysicists to estimate grain size, bulk risk of sticking the bottomhole assembly. At some
volume, saturation, porosity and permeability of wells, hostile downhole or surface conditions
formations, core samples often serve as the make coring too risky. In other cases, correla-
benchmark against which other methods are tions are not sufficient to allow geologists to
calibrated. However, notwithstanding several accurately and confidently pick coring points.
hundred thousand feet of whole or slabbed core Instead, many operators rely on sidewall cores
residing in core libraries around the world, most obtained through prospective pay zones, and may
wells are not cored. compensate for lack of whole core data by
supplementing their usual logging program with
a wider range of measurements.

4 Oilfield Review
As oil companies try to drain aging reservoirs placed in the center of the gantry, while the patient from this equation, attenuation is a
more efficiently, engineers and geoscientists may opposing X-ray source and detectors rotate function of the energy of the X-ray as well as the
come to regret earlier decisions to forgo coring. around the patient. With the patient positioned density and atomic number of the elements
Once a well has been drilled through a pay zone, roughly in the middle of the source-receiver through which the X-ray passes. The correlation
it is too late to go back to obtain whole cores, plane, the rotating gantry allows a series of is fairly straightforward: lower-energy X-rays,
unless the well is sidetracked. However, closely spaced radiographic scans to be obtained higher densities and higher atomic numbers
mineralogy, grain size, saturation, permeability, from multiple angles. These scans, or generally result in greater attenuation.5
porosity and other measures of rock fabric can radiographic projections, can then be processed Digital projection data are converted into a
sometimes be determined without coring. to obtain a 3D representation of the patient computer-generated image using tomographic-
With improvements on the early medical CAT- (below). reconstruction algorithms to map the distribu-
scan technique developed in 1972, geoscientists CT radiographic projections are based on the tion of attenuation coefficients.6 This distribution
can take a series of fine, closely spaced X-ray differential attenuation of X-rays caused by can be displayed in 2D slices, composed of points
scans through a rock sample to obtain important density contrasts within a patient’s body. This that are shaded according to their attenuation
information about a reservoir.1 Using a
nondestructive technique called microcomputed
tomography, a focused X-ray beam creates
“virtual slices” that can be resolved to a scale of
microns, not just millimeters.2 These refinements
also allow the option of examining smaller
samples of rock; instead of depending on whole
cores for porosity and permeability measure-
ments, geoscientists can now use formation
cuttings to estimate these properties.3 Although
many companies do not core their wells, they
usually employ the services of a mudlogger to
catch formation cuttings as they come over the
shale shaker. When they don’t have core,
geoscientists are finding that a sliver of rock can
be highly revealing.
This article reviews the development of X-ray
computed tomography (CT) and the ensuing
technology transfer from medical to oilfield
applications. We describe how the data can be
evaluated using immersive visualization tech- > Thoracic CAT scan. Manipulating color and opacity values of different
niques and discuss a range of oilfield applications tissues provides physicians with an unobstructed view of a patient’s lungs
that may benefit from this technology. Finally, we and skeletal system. (Image courtesy of Ajay Limaye, VizLab, The Australian
National University.)
will see how this technology served researchers in
their evaluation of casing cement and well
stimulation treatments. attenuation represents a decrease in energy as values (see “Moving from 2D Points to 3D
X-rays pass through various parts of the body. Volumes,” page 6). Thus, in hospital scans, bone
CT Scan Technology Some tissues scatter or absorb X-rays better than would typically be assigned a light color to
Originally developed for medical use by Godfrey others: thick tissue absorbs more X-rays than correspond with its comparatively high
Newbold Hounsfield in 1972, computed tomog- thin; bone absorbs more X-rays than soft tissue, attenuation value, while air-filled lung tissue
raphy uses X-ray scans to investigate internal while fat, muscle or organs allow more X-rays to might be assigned a darker color corresponding
structures within a body, such as those of soft pass through to the detectors. Removing the to low attenuation values.
tissue and bone.4 CT overcomes the problem of
superimposition exhibited in conventional X-ray 1. In the medical field, the computerized axial is the Characteristic Length Scale for Permeability?
tomography (CAT) scan is sometimes also called Direct Analysis from Microtomographic Data,” paper
radiography when three-dimensional features computer-assisted tomography, and is synonymous SPE 95950, presented at the SPE Annual Technical
of internal organs are obscured by overlying with computed tomography. Conference and Exhibition, Dallas, October 9–12, 2005.
2. A micron, or micrometer, is equal to one millionth of a 4. Hounsfield GN: “A Method of and Apparatus for
organs and tissues imaged on two-dimensional meter, or more commonly, one thousandth of a millimeter. Examination of a Body by Radiation such as X- or
X-ray film. It is abbreviated as µ, µm or mc. In English measure, a Gamma Radiation,” British Patent No. 1,283,915
micron equals 3.937 x 10-5 in. (August 2, 1972).
Rather than projecting X-rays through a
3. Siddiqui S, Grader AS, Touati M, Loermans AM and 5. For more on X-ray CT: Publication Services
patient and onto a film plate, as with Funk JJ: “Techniques for Extracting Reliable Density Department of the ODP Science Operator. http://www-
conventional X-rays, the CT process takes a and Porosity Data from Cuttings,” paper SPE 96918, odp.tamu.edu/publications/185_SR/005/005_5.htm
presented at the SPE Annual Technical Conference and (accessed January 27, 2006).
different approach. The CT scanner uses a Exhibition, Dallas, October 9–12, 2005. 6. Feldkamp LA, Davis LC and Kress JW: “Practical
rotating gantry to which an X-ray tube is Bauget F, Arns CH, Saadatfar M, Sheppard AP, Sok RM, Cone-Beam Algorithm,” Journal of the Optical Society
Turner ML, Pinczewski WV and Knackstedt MA: “What of America A1, no. 6 (June 1984): 612–619.
mounted opposite a detector array. The patient is

Spring 2006 5
Moving from 2D Points to 3D Volumes

In the mid-1880s, Neo-Impressionist artist


Georges Seurat perfected a revolutionary
technique of painting with tiny dots of color.
Like Michel Chevrul before him, Seurat recog-
nized that from a distance, the eye would
naturally blend together tiny dots of primary
colors to produce secondary shades. Using tiny
brush strokes, Seurat and his contemporaries
captured scenes of cityscapes, harbors and
people at work and leisure. This technique
came to be known as pointillism.
Computers use a similar technique to display
text and images; however, they work at a much
finer scale. Every image portrayed on a com- > Pixel resolution. The sharpness and clarity of an image are affected by pixel count and the size
puter monitor or video screen is composed of of the pixels. To increase the number of pixels within a fixed space, pixel size must be reduced.
As pixel size (in white) progressively decreases (left to right), more pixels can be used to provide
many, almost imperceptibly tiny dots, spaced greater detail in the image.
at extremely close intervals. In a 2D picture
screen, each dot, or pixel (a word formed
from the contraction of picture element) can
be defined by its horizontal (x) and vertical
(y) screen coordinates. It is also defined by its
color value. In color images, each pixel is also ,z
ber
assigned its own brightness. 0 Color bar 256 um
c en
The number of shades that a pixel can take Sli
1,000 1,000
on depends on the computer and the number
of bits per pixel (bpp) it is capable of process- 800 800
Vertical coordinates, y

Vertical coordinates, y

ing. Common values range from 8 bpp (28 bits, color


which translates to 256 colors) to 24 bpp 600 600 x
z Voxel
(224 bits, or 16,777,216 colors). On an eight-bit x
400 Pixel 400
gray-scale image, for instance, each pixel y
would be assigned a value corresponding to a 200 200
y
shade of gray, ranging from 0 to 255, where 0
represents black and 255 represents white. 0 0
The number of pixels used to create an 0 200 400 600 800 1,000 0 200 400 600 800 1,000
Horizontal coordinates, x Horizontal coordinates, x
image controls its resolution (above right).
As more pixels are used, the image can be por- > Pixel to voxel. A flat pixel (left) takes on a new dimension when the slice on which it resides is
trayed in greater detail, or higher resolution. stacked with other slices to form a volume (right). Adding the z-coordinate of the slice number
essentially assigns a depth-value to the pixel, thus creating a voxel within the stack of slices.
Resolution is thus initially impacted by the
image acquisition system and later, by the
image display system.
Resolution in digital image acquisition as pixels) accumulate charges corresponding which point the charge in each cell is
systems is largely governed by the number of to the amount of light passing through the recorded by a processing chip and converted
light-sensitive photoreceptor cells, known as lens and onto each cell.1 As more light falls to a digital value that determines the color
photosites, which are used to record an image. onto a photosite, the charge grows. Light is and intensity of individual pixels used to dis-
These photosites (more commonly referred to shut off to the lens once the shutter closes, at play the image on screen. Resolution in these

6 Oilfield Review
Evolving to Industrial Strength It didn’t take long for those outside the
Density contrasts within a rock body can be medical field to recognize the potential of CT
imaged just as they can within a human body technology for nondestructive evaluation of
(below). By the mid 1980s, CT technology was materials. Geoscientists soon joined the ranks of
devices is often expressed not in terms of pho- making significant inroads into geoscience other researchers, particularly those in the field
tosites, but rather in megapixels. A applications. In addition to quantitative of materials testing, who sought increasingly
1.2-megapixel device, for instance, might have determination of bulk density of rock samples, finer detail for imaging internal structures. This
an area of 1,280 x 960 (1,228,800 pixels), while CT scanning was adapted to visualize microbial capability has largely been realized through
higher resolution would be attained by a 3.1- desulfurization of coal, displacement of heavy oil, development of industrial-strength CT systems,
megapixel device measuring 2,048 x 1,536 and oil flow through carbonate cores.7 which can employ more powerful X-rays, a tighter
(3,145,728 pixels). focal point and longer exposure times than those
Image resolution can then be affected by used in the medical field.8
the medium on which it is displayed. A rela-
tively low-resolution computer monitor might Mineral Density, g/cm3 Mineral Density, g/cm3
be described as a 640 x 480 display. This Quartz 2.64 Gypsum 2.35
means that the monitor has a width of 640 pix- Calcite 2.71 Dolomite 2.85
els, spread across a height of 480 lines, Anhydrite 2.98 Illite 2.52
totaling 307,200 pixels. If those pixels were Barite 4.09 Chlorite 2.76
spread across a 15-inch monitor, then any Celestite 3.79 Hematite 5.18
image displayed on that monitor would be > Density values of various minerals commonly found in sedimentary rock.
allotted 50 dots per inch. To increase resolu- X-rays used to visualize rock structures are affected, in part, by differences
tion, either the screen size must be reduced in density and mineralogy within a sample.
or more pixels must be packed into the
screen. Modern applications generally take In the early days of CT rock scans, it was not
7. Kayser A, Kellner A, Holzapfel H-W, van der Bilt G,
both approaches, squeezing a huge number unusual for geoscientists to work out agreements Warner S and Gras R: “3D Visualization of a Rock
of pixels into a smaller area. with the only institution in town that could Sample,” in Doré AG and Vining BA (eds): Petroleum
Geology: North-West Europe and Global Perspectives –
To image a 3D object, the pixel is expanded provide access to such sophisticated technology. Proceedings of the 6th Petroleum Geology Conference.
into another dimension. A third coordinate Often in the dark of night, with as little attention London: The Geological Society (2005): 1613–1620.
Vinegar HJ: “X-ray CT and NMR Imaging of Rocks,”
(z) is added to the x-y location to precisely as possible, core samples from the oilpatch would Journal of Petroleum Technology 38, no. 3 (March 1986):
define the pixel’s position within the volume be wheeled into the pristine and sterile setting of 257–259.
of a 3D object, thereby creating a voxel— a hospital CAT-scanning facility for imaging and 8. For more on high-resolution X-ray CT: University of Texas
High-Resolution X-ray Computed Tomography Facility.
short for volume pixel. In CT images, the analysis (below). http://www.ctlab.geo.utexas.edu/overview/index.php#
z-coordinate often denotes depth, and is dic- anchor1-1 (accessed January 30, 2006).

tated merely by the position that a


tomographic slice holds within a volume
formed by stacking together numerous closely
spaced slices (previous page, bottom). In
addition to x, y and z coordinates, a voxel can
define a point by a given attribute value. In
the case of CT scans, that value is density,
which is a function of the sample’s trans-
parency to X-rays. Density values can be tied
to a color spectrum, while a range of intensi-
ties can control the opacity of a voxel on a
computer screen. With this information and
3D rendering software, a two-dimensional
image of a 3D object can be generated for
viewing at various angles on a computer screen.

1. Although experts may correctly assert that photosites


are not actually pixels, the terms are becoming
increasingly interchangeable in the popular vernacu-
lar, thanks largely to the broad appeal of digital
photography, in which manufacturers of digital cam-
eras describe resolution in terms of megapixels.

> A different kind of patient. A section of whole core is placed on a sliding gurney prior to imaging at
a hospital CAT-scan facility.

Spring 2006 7
With the development of microCT (µCT),
researchers are attaining much higher
resolutions.9 Using µCT, researchers are some-
times able to image their samples with voxel
sizes as low as 2.5 µm. Depending on the size of a
sample and the number of pixels used to image it,
voxel sizes of one-thousandth of the sample size
are being attained. For example, a 1-megapixel
camera using 1,000 x 1,000 pixels could Barite cement: 1%
conceivably resolve a 1-cubic centimeter sample
to about 10 µm. Similarly, a 16-megapixel camera
(4,000 x 4,000 pixels) can resolve the same
sample to 2.5 µm.
At such resolutions, geoscientists can distin-
guish density or porosity contrasts inside a rock
sample and can study pore space and pore
connectivity in great detail. This µCT technology
permits recognition of grains or cements with
different mineralogical compositions (right). It
Pore space:16%
has even been used to differentiate grains of the
same type, such as those found in carbonates, Sandstone grains and quartz cement: 78%
where microporosity may vary between different
grain types in the same rock.10

The Scanning Process


The scanning process to acquire µCT data is in
some respects analogous to acquiring 3D seismic
data. A seismic crew shoots a series of regularly
spaced seismic lines. Coordinates of the starting
and ending points of each line are surveyed, Calcite cement: 5%
making it possible to infer the distance between > Three-dimensional quantification and spatial distribution of sandstone
each line in the series. It is therefore possible to components. While most sandstones consist primarily of quartz grains and
determine the position of any point along any cement, X-ray imagery helps put other components into perspective.
line as well as the distance between points Differences in X-ray attenuation throughout the sample indicate changes in
within the series of lines. With this knowledge, a density caused by porosity and various mineral constituents of the rock.
Once mapped, these characteristics can be isolated for further scrutiny.
position between any two points or lines can be
interpolated when the data are processed.
For µCT, a regular series of closely spaced
scans are acquired to obtain high-resolution components: an X-ray source, a rotating stage on page, top). Its source generates X-rays with a 2-
virtual slices of a sample. Each pixel in the slice which the sample is placed and an X-ray camera to 5-µm focal spot. The X-ray beam expands from
represents a scanned point and has coordinates to record the pattern of X-ray attenuation within the focal point, creating a cone-beam geometry.12
that correspond to an actual point in the sample. a sample. Because magnification of the sample increases
Because coordinates of each point are known, To scan a sample, it must be placed on the with proximity to the X-ray source, the rotating
distances between each point and each slice can rotating stage, positioned between the X-ray stage and camera are designed to slide
be determined. And just like the seismic line, source and the camera. X-rays emitted from the separately on a rail, allowing researchers to
points or slices can be interpolated between source are attenuated through scattering or adjust distances between source, sample and
existing slices. By stacking the series of slices absorption before being recorded by the camera. The sample stage can rotate the sample
close together to make up a volume of data, each camera.11 The camera then records a large series with millidegree accuracy and can support up
pixel in a slice becomes part of the stack and of radiographs as the sample rotates incre- to 120 kg [265 lbm] of sample and associated
takes on a third dimension. In this way, each mentally on its stage through 360°. A computer test equipment.13
pixel can be treated as a voxel. program stacks the digital projection data while At this facility, the X-ray “camera” consists of
The scanning process is carried out by highly maintaining true spacing between pixels and a scintillator that fluoresces green in response to
specialized X-ray systems. Though several slices. CT algorithms are applied to these data to X-rays, and a charge-coupled device (CCD) that
companies offer research-grade systems, many reconstruct the internal structure of the sample converts this green light into electric signals.14
X-ray microtomography devices are custom-built. and preserve its scale in three dimensions. The camera has a 70-mm2 active area, containing
Regardless of whether they are off-the-shelf or One such device was built in 2002 by The 4.1 megapixels (2,048 x 2,048 pixels). The
specially designed, all rely on three primary Australian National University in Canberra (next system’s large field of view allows researchers to

8 Oilfield Review
and fracture planes of rock samples to be viewed
orthogonally, even when the physical sample has
been cut obliquely to these planes. Sedimentary
and structural features of the rock sample are
typically analyzed in the form of slices or
transparency views through a volume.
While the scanning process relies on density
Scintillator + CCD Rotation stage X-ray source
differences to distinguish features within a
Approximately 1.5 meters sample, the visualization process depends largely
on opacity differences. One way to expose
> A high-resolution X-ray tomography device at The Australian National University. The rotating
sample stage and charge-coupled device (CCD) camera slide on a track, enabling adjustment of the features deep within a volume comprising
distance between the camera, sample and X-ray source. With this device, a sample can be magnified millions of voxels is to render surrounding voxels
from 1.1 to more than 100 times its original size. The stage rotates with millidegree accuracy and can invisible. Opacity rendering is the key to
be fitted with fluid pumps for imaging flow through porous media. (Figure courtesy of The Australian visualization. Each voxel is assigned a value along
National University.)
a transparency-opacity spectrum, thus making
some voxels stand out while others fade away.
image a 60-mm specimen with a 30-micron pixel processed by supercomputer, and it takes 128 Without this capability, the opacity of outer voxels
size. They can also zoom in for high-resolution central processing units about 2 hours to would hide all features lying within the volume.
scanning to image a 4-mm specimen with generate the tomogram. Voxel-based technology can be used to
2-micron pixels. determine the volume and geometry of rock
Approximately 3,000 projections are needed Visualization Technology grains, cement, matrix and pore space within a
to generate a 2,0483 voxel tomogram. Between Once individual radiographic projections have sample. Using Inside Reality opacity-rendering
each projection, the sample stage is rotated been compiled into a 3D data volume file, the tools, geoscientists can assign different values of
0.12°. The entire process takes 12 to 24 hours, data can be loaded into an immersive visuali- the opacity-transparency spectrum to various
depending on the type of sample and the filtering zation environment for detailed examination. components within a volume. This technique
steps required to reduce sampling artifacts. The With Inside Reality virtual reality technology, the allows geoscientists to distinguish between
resulting 24 gigabytes of projection data are data can be imaged and manipulated like any materials of different density values. For
other volume of 3D data. Originally developed to example, the distribution of cement between
9. Abbreviations for microcomputerized tomography range
from µCT (where the Greek letter mu is a standard
help visualize seismic volumes based on miles or mineral grains shows up as a distinctive color,
symbol for the prefix “micro”) to uCT (where u is a kilometers of data, Inside Reality technology can while setting pore space to zero-opacity makes it
substitute for mu) to mCT (where the m stands for micro)
to XMT for X-ray Microtomography.
also handle data volumes based on much finer, transparent, thus showing the spaces between
10. Kayser A, Gras R, Curtis A and Wood R: “Visualizing submillimeter scales. grains. This allows the viewer to separate rock
Internal Rock Structures: New Approach Spans Five Geoscientists utilize this advanced visuali- grains from cement, matrix and pore space to
Scale-Orders,” Offshore 64, no. 8 (August 2004): 129–131.
11. Ketcham RA and Carlson WD: “Acquisition, Optimization
zation technology to view a data volume from any reveal internal sedimentary and structural
and Interpretation of X-Ray Computed Tomographic direction. This capability enables bedding planes features (below).
Imagery: Applications to the Geosciences,” Computers
& Geosciences 27, no. 4 (May 2001): 381–400.
12. Sakellariou A, Sawkins TJ, Senden TJ and Limaye A:
“X-Ray Tomography for Mesoscale Physics
Applications,” Physica A 339, no. 1-2 (August 2004):
152–158.
Sakellariou A, Sawkins TJ, Senden TJ, Knackstedt MA,
Turner ML, Jones AC, Saadatfar M, Roberts RJ,
Limaye A, Arns CA, Sheppard AP and Sok RM: “An
X-Ray Tomography Facility for Quantitative Prediction
of Mechanical and Transport Properties in Geological,
Biological and Synthetic Systems,” in Bonse U (ed):
Developments in X-Ray Tomography IV, Proceedings of
SPIE—The International Society for Optical Engineering,
Vol. 5535. Bellingham, Washington, USA: SPIE Press
(2004): 473–474.
13. This test equipment includes pumps or other devices
used to study fluid flow or mechanical compaction. 1.0 mm
14. Rather than exposing film to light, CCD technology
captures images in a technique similar to common
digital photography. A CCD uses a thin silicon wafer to
record light pulses given off by a scintillator. The CCD
silicon wafer is divided into several thousand individual
light-sensitive cells. When a light pulse from the > Sandstone pores. An opacity filter is used to render different features in volume windows using
scintillator impinges on one of these cells, the Inside Reality software. The left window above and behind the yellow arrow shows only quartz grains
photoelectric effect converts the light to a tiny electrical (light green) in this eolian sandstone from the Rotliegendes formation in Germany. A volume showing
charge. The charge within a cell increases with every only pore space (blue) is in the background on the right. The smaller volume in the foreground on the
light pulse that hits the cell. Each cell on the CCD silicon
wafer corresponds in size and location to an image right shows late diagenetic barite cement (red). The slice making up the base image indicates quartz
pixel. The pixel’s intensity is determined by the (gray), pore space (blue), barite (red) and carbonate cement (orange). The yellow arrow for scale is
magnitude of the charge within a corresponding cell. 1 mm long.

Spring 2006 9
within a volume known to represent porosity, for
example, and the volume-grower tool will display all
interconnected porosity within the volume (left).
Because each voxel is defined in part by its
coordinates, the distance between any two voxels
can be measured. To facilitate this process, the
Inside Reality system uses a ruler tool to provide
a visual scale. This tool can be used to measure
grain or pore size in three dimensions, helping
geoscientists estimate pore-volume proportions
and connectivity.
Taking rock samples from the laboratory to an
immersive visualization environment enables an
asset team to share important information and
concepts about reservoir samples so they can make
more informed decisions. Inside Reality virtual
1.0 m
reality technology lets geoscientists share 3D
m virtual core data with those in remote sites to help
asset teams collaborate with company experts and
partners around the world (below left).

> Sandstone tracking. An opacity filter has been used to highlight quartz grains in sandstone from a Applications
Rotliegendes gas reservoir in Germany. In the volume (light gray), interconnected porosity (blue) is Rock fabric and textural data provide geologists
imaged using the volume-grower tool provided by Inside Reality software. Fringe (red) along the edge with key information used in analyzing facies and
of the porosity indicates possible connections to neighboring pores detected automatically by the
software. Carbonate cement (orange) is also shown in the volume. The horizontal slice shows quartz in determining depositional environments.
grains (dark gray), pore space (black), carbonate cement (medium gray), and barite cement (white). Geologists and petrophysicists can now obtain
important information about grain size, shape
and matrix from digital scans of core or core
fragments. A single core-fragment image can
yield thousands of individual grains. By digitally
disaggregating grains in a scanned sample,
analysts can obtain coordinates of all voxels
composing each grain, the number of neighboring
grains and grain-overlap information.15
From such a dataset, geologists can derive a
comprehensive analysis of grain sizes and
distribution to obtain a full suite of statistical

15. Saadatfar M, Turner ML, Arns CH, Averdunk H,


Senden TJ, Sheppard AP, Sok RM, Pinczewski WV,
Kelly J and Knackstedt MA: “Rock Fabric and Texture
from Digital Core Analysis,” Transactions of the SPWLA
46th Annual Logging Symposium, New Orleans,
June 26–29, 2005, paper ZZ.
16. Both the Udden-Wentworth and the Krumbein scales are
> Visualization using Inside Reality technology. Bringing sample volumes into used to classify rock samples according to diameter; the
an iCenter secure networked collaborative environment allows asset teams former is a verbal classification while the latter is
to become immersed in their data. Stereo projection creates a perception of numerical. According to the Udden-Wentworth scale,
depth, providing a different perspective on the 3D nature of the rock and its sedimentary particles larger than 64 mm in diameter are
classified as cobbles. Smaller particles are pebbles,
microstructure. Inside Reality visualization software provides a detailed granules, sand and silt. Those smaller than 0.0039 mm
image of a foraminifera fossil measuring 1.5 x 1.0 mm (inset). This 3D are designated as clay. Several other grain-size scales
visualization allows examination of the fossil from many different angles. The are in use, but the Udden-Wentworth scale (commonly
animated avatar mirrors the pointing motions and actions of another viewer called the Wentworth scale) is the one that is most
who is interacting with these data from a remote site. frequently used in geology. The Krumbein scale is a
logarithmic scale, which assigns a value designated as
phi to classify the size of the sediment. Phi is computed
by the equation: ø = –log2 (grain size in mm).
17. Arns CH, Averdunk H, Bauget F, Sakellariou A,
The ability to manipulate opacity values plays point has a certain X-ray attenuation value. Once Senden TJ, Sheppard AP, Sok RM, Pinczewski WV and
an important role in the seedpoint and volume- a point is selected, the program can automat- Knackstedt MA: “Digital Core Laboratory: Analysis of
Reservoir Core Fragments from 3D Images,”
grower tools featured as part of the Inside Reality ically pick all neighboring voxels of a similar Transactions of the SPWLA 45th Annual Logging
toolbox. Using the seedpoint tool, the viewer value that are connected to that point. This Symposium, Noordwijk, The Netherlands, June 6–9,
2004, paper EEE.
selects a point within a slice or volume. This feature can help a geoscientist pick a point 18. Bennaceur K, Gupta N, Monea M, Ramakrishnan TS,
Tanden T, Sakurai S and Whittaker S: “CO2 Capture and
Storage—A Solution Within,” Oilfield Review 16, no. 3
(Autumn 2004): 44–61.

10 Oilfield Review
Grain Size

Very coarse
sand Coarse Medium Fine Silt

50

40

30
Frequency

20

10

0
-1 0 1 2 3 4 > Pore-scale information derived from tomographic images. Pore centers
= -log2 (diameter)
(blue spheres), connected by pore throats (blue cylinders), are used
> Statistics obtained from a single slice of a sample. More than 4,100 grains to model porosity within a sample of carbonate rock (yellow). The size
were virtually disaggregated from a single slice, allowing researchers to and location of pore centers and pore throats in this network reflect
compile detailed statistical data used to characterize rock fabric and actual conditions within the rock microstructure. The complexity and
texture. When compared with other samples, these statistical measures heterogeneity of carbonate pore networks are brought to the
can help geologists sort out the depositional environment of the rock. forefront as part of the rock matrix is rendered semitransparent while
(Adapted from Saadatfar et al, reference 15.) pore space is rendered opaque. (Image courtesy of The Australian
National University.)

measurements (above left). Grain volume is prominently in determining relative permeability Studying Effects of Carbon Dioxide
measured by counting the voxels in each distinct and recovery estimates in reservoir samples— on Casing Cement
grain, from which size is derived and then graded parameters that can be hard to quantify when In an important application beyond the realm of
against standard Udden-Wentworth or Krumbein different fluids compete to flow through the conventional petrophysics, µCT was used to study
scales of grain sizes.16 Automated programs can same opening. the effects of carbon dioxide [CO2] on casing
track and classify individual grains according to A variety of other measurements can be taken cement. Greenhouse gases, particularly CO2,
grain shape characteristics of sphericity and from tomographic images, from which important have been linked to rising temperatures around
roundness or classify according to textural information is derived. Analysts can directly the world. Capturing CO2 emissions and
categories, such as sorting, grain contacts, correlate image data on pore structure and sequestering them in the subsurface have been
and matrix or grain-support. Some programs connectivity to measures of formation factor, proposed as a measure to reduce atmospheric
can also measure anisotropy in grain orientation permeability and capillary drainage pressures. greenhouse-gas concentrations until low-
to help geoscientists ascertain sediment- Comparisons of results obtained from µCT emission energy sources become viable.18
transport direction. images and conventional laboratory measure- However, CO2 becomes supercritical when
More important than the detailed measure- ments on the same core material have generally temperature and pressure conditions exceed
ment of rock grains is the analysis of the space shown good agreement.17
between the grains and the contents therein.
Opacity-rendering tools work particularly well in
showing what is not rock—that is, its porosity.
Researchers can obtain a good picture of porosity
by decreasing the opacity of dense voxels
representing rock grains and cements, while
simultaneously increasing the opacity of low-
density voxels (right). This same opacity- Opacity change
rendering technique highlights the extent of
interconnected porosity within the rock. Once
the porosity is brought up on screen, geo-
scientists can measure the size of pore spaces
and pore throats using the ruler tool. Pore
Grains and quartz cement Pores and pore throats
interconnectivity can also be charted, using pore
> A whole lot of nothing. By manipulating the opacity of a scanned sample image, it is easy to visually
network models based on tomographic imaging
examine either sand grains (green) or pore space (blue). In many evaluations, this detailed analysis of
(above right). Pore-throat and pore-size distri- pore space can reveal critical clues to future performance of a reservoir.
bution, along with interconnectivity, figure

Spring 2006 11
31.1°C and 73.8 bar [87.9°F and 1,070 psi]— good mechanical behavior after exposure to Examining Wormholes Caused
conditions that are easily exceeded in most scCO2 gas. Laboratory tests on these new by Stimulation Treatments
medium to deep wells.19 Therefore, an important materials show only a slight decrease in Researchers have also used CT imaging to study
aspect of any CO2 sequestration project is to compressive strength during the first two days, the effects of heterogeneity on carbonate matrix
know how downhole materials will react to and essentially no loss for the subsequent stimulation. In one experiment, it was instru-
supercritical CO2 (scCO2). three months. mental in visualizing the effects of the original
Scientists at Schlumberger Cambridge porosity distribution on acid-dissolution patterns.
Research in England have collaborated with
their counterparts at Schlumberger Riboud
Product Center in Clamart, France, to investi-
gate long-term effects of CO2 storage on wellbore
integrity. One such experiment sought to Sample Plug CT Image
determine how scCO2 would react with casing
cement.20 Long used in oil and gas wells to Alteration front
hydraulically isolate pay zones from the surface
and other permeable zones, portland-based Carbonation front
Zone of very low porosity
cements play a critical role in wellbore integrity.
Air bubble
This study focused on a sample of neat (Diameter 0.5 mm)
cement.21 The cylindrical cement sample was
cured for three days at 90°C and 280 bar [194°F Dissolution front
Zone of very high porosity
and 4,061 psi]. Scientists obtained CT scans of
the cement cylinder before exposing it to scCO2. Filled microfracture
The cement was then subjected to a wet scCO2
environment and kept at 90°C and 280 bar for 0 1 2
cm
30 days. Two sample plugs were cut from the
original cylinder and then scanned.
Using Inside Reality software, researchers > A sample plug of neat cement. Only a few centimeters in length, this sample revealed important
were able to manipulate the data volume to information concerning the behavior of supercritical CO2 on portland cement. The tomographic gray-
scale image of the cement sample (right), scanned with a resolution of 18.33 µm, shows a high
visualize porosity and microfractures and arbi- concentration of aragonite along the edge of a carbonation front, accompanied by an alteration front.
trarily slice through zones of interest. By An additional dissolution front of high porosity extends farther into the core. Circular holes with a
comparing scans acquired before and after diameter of 500 µm may represent air bubbles. Microfractures are filled with aragonite crystals.
treatment, researchers noted significant Lighter features represent higher CT values, signifying different mineralogy in the case of the filled
microfracture, or different amounts of microporosity, in the case of the alteration front.
changes to the cement plug, resulting from scCO2
attack. Of particular interest were the formation
and distribution of microfractures, along with a
zone of aragonite replacement and a zone of
mineral alteration characterized by high
secondary porosity. System Me
nu – Main
To o l s Menu
The reaction between scCO2 and cement System Menu Save Scene
Aragonite front
produced an irregular carbonation front, Colormap
Fa u l t
S n a p s h ot

Fe n c e Restore Scene
extending 4 mm [0.16 in.] from the outer edge of Growing Stereo
Reservoir
the core toward its center. This lighter colored Ruler
AU T O S AV E
Neat cement
Sketch Inside Reality
carbonation front was readily apparent in the Slice S C R _ 0 4 0 917 _ 17 3 6 _ 1
Su r f a c e
gray-scale 3D volume, and in a color-coded slice ume Estimation SCR _04 091 7_1
847 _1 Ver sion 5.1
[90 ]

do w
Vo lum e Win
(above right). Subsequent X-ray diffraction We ll

analysis determined that the alteration front had


a different composition than the original cement,
which had been replaced by aragonite. Porosity
was clearly enhanced in the regions around
the microfractures and the aragonite front (right).
The tests suggested that exposure to scCO2
may cause conventional cement to lose more > Highlighting the extent of supercritical CO2 alteration. Color-coding enhances features that may not
than 65% of its strength after only six weeks. be readily apparent in gray-scale imaging. Microfractures formed during the supercritical CO2 attack
These important observations provided an served as conduits for further aragonite alteration. The concentration of aragonite along the fractures
impetus for creating new blends of cement. and the edge of the alteration front can be visually distinguished using color-coding provided by
Inside Reality software. Materials imaged are unaltered neat cement (green), an alteration front
Schlumberger researchers have developed new (yellow), and mineral-filled microfractures or carbonation front (red). Increased porosity (blue) marks
scCO2-resistant cementing materials that display the extent of various dissolution patterns.

12 Oilfield Review
Stimulation treatments are commonly formation to facilitate the flow of oil. Better still, applications, it is easy to envision the potential
performed in wells where poor permeability wormholes require only a small volume of acid to spread of new applications for µCT.
limits production due to naturally tight produce significant increases in permeability. The technology will no doubt prove
formations or formation damage. A common Researchers are therefore investigating factors instrumental in improving the interpretation and
stimulation technique involves the injection of that influence production of wormholes. application of laboratory and log data. As an
acid into carbonate formations. Acid dissolves CT scanning has proved instrumental in increasingly important tool in nondestructive
some of the formation matrix material and determining the effects that injection rate and testing, its application can be extended to
creates flow channels that increase the spatial distribution of porosity have on dissolution laboratory testing of unconsolidated or friable
permeability of the matrix. patterns formed during stimulation experiments formation samples. The combination of µCT
The efficiency of this process depends on the (below). Because it is nondestructive, this imaging with numerical calculations may lead to
type of acid used, reaction rates, formation technique allows for characterization of the core more accurate predictions of a wide range of rock
properties and injection conditions. While before and after the treatment experiment so properties crucial to exploration, reservoir
dissolution increases formation permeability, the the development and shape of the wormhole can characterization and recovery calculations.
relative increase in permeability for a given be evaluated. Further applications include development of
amount of acid is greatly influenced by injection improved cross-property correlations and
development of libraries of 3D images that will

> Visualizing wormhole development. A sample of Winterset limestone was scanned by CT before (bottom) and after (top) acid injection. This data volume
is displayed using Inside Reality visualization technology, in which pore space is rendered opaque, while surrounding voxels are rendered transparent.
Initial distribution of pores (bottom) shows discrete clusters of pores (blue) along the long axis of the core. After acidizing (top), the core shows increased
porosity, with a dissolution pattern extending from right to left that further marks the flow of acid during injection.

conditions. At extremely low injection rates, acid Peering into the Future allow a more rigorous and quantitative descrip-
is spent soon after it contacts the formation, Tomography is not new to the oil industry. At the tion of rock type and texture. These quantitative
resulting in relatively shallow dissolution along upstream end of the tomography spectrum lies descriptions can be integrated with classical
the face of the injection zone. High flow rates crosswell seismic tomography; at the downstream sedimentological descriptions. The technology
produce a uniform dissolution pattern because end is industrial process tomography for can also make a significant contribution to the
the acid reacts over a large region. In either case, refineries. As a research tool, µCT is used across study of elastic behavior, porosity-permeability
the resulting gains in permeability require a broad suite of industrial applications to monitor trends and multiphase flow properties such as
relatively large expenditures of acid. performance of polymer-enhanced foams and capillary pressure, relative permeability and
However, at intermediate flow rates, long polyethylene resins or to view phase separation residual saturations.
conductive channels known as wormholes are and pore-space characterization in formation Future technological innovations will probably
formed. These channels penetrate deep into the samples. Across this range of tomographic include higher resolution to overcome problems
in predicting porosity when micropores fall
19. Above its critical point at 31.1°C and 73.8 bar, CO2 20. Barlet-Gouédard V, Rimmelé G, Goffé B and Porcherie O:
becomes a supercritical fluid. In this compressed state,
below the detection capability of the present
“Mitigation Strategies for the Risk of CO2 Migration
its properties lie between those of a gas and a liquid. Through Wellbores,” paper IADC/SPE 98924, presented technique. With the improving resolution of their
With a lower surface tension than its liquid form, at the IADC/SPE Drilling Conference, Miami, Florida,
supercritical CO2 can easily penetrate cracks and
samples, µCT technology is helping today’s
USA, February 21–23, 2006.
crevices. Unlike CO2 gas, however, it can dissolve 21. Neat cement has no additives that would alter its setting geoscientists to better see their world in a grain
substances that are soluble in liquid CO2. time or rheological properties. of sand. —MV

Spring 2006 13

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