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<title>ATTRIBUTE-DRIVEN FLUID REPLACEMENT MODELING AND RESERVOIR CHARACTERISATION OF TETEMU FIELD, ONSHORE NIGER DELTA, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2140</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 23:48:08 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-05T23:48:08Z</dc:date>
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<title>ATTRIBUTE-DRIVEN FLUID REPLACEMENT MODELING AND RESERVOIR CHARACTERISATION OF TETEMU FIELD, ONSHORE NIGER DELTA, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2141</link>
<description>ATTRIBUTE-DRIVEN FLUID REPLACEMENT MODELING AND RESERVOIR CHARACTERISATION OF TETEMU FIELD, ONSHORE NIGER DELTA, NIGERIA
SALAMI, Rotimi
Change in saturation levels occurs in reservoirs during hydrocarbon production resulting in fluid&#13;
replacement. This impacts on the mechanical and elastic properties of reservoirs and consequently,&#13;
alters production model and forecast. Increasing occurrence of altered production model has&#13;
necessitated the need to understand how these properties can trigger fluid replacement in&#13;
hydrocarbon reservoirs. Mechanical and elastic properties can be harnessed to constrain Fluid&#13;
Replacement Modeling (FRM) in two scenarios: increasing water and gas saturations (Sg) at&#13;
various reservoir conditions. This research was designed to produce geological model to predict the&#13;
responses of rock properties to fluid replacement and reservoir behaviour.&#13;
The FRM and reservoir characterisation were carried out using petrophysical and rock-physics&#13;
analyses of wells A1, A2 and A3 of Tetemu Field, onshore Niger Delta. Petrophysics was employed&#13;
to determine lithology, Net-Gross Ratio (NGR), shale volume (Vshale), porosity (ɸe) and saturations&#13;
which were estimated by Gamma Ray (GR), neutron-density and resistivity logs. Depositional&#13;
environments were deduced by GR signatures. Rock-physics was used to determine reservoir’s&#13;
stress state, elastic and mechanical properties’ responses to increasing saturation. Young (E), Bulk&#13;
(K) and Shear (G) moduli, Unconfined Compressive Strength (UCS), Compressibility (Cb) and&#13;
Poisson ratio (ʋ) were derived from elastic properties such as Compressional wave velocity (Vp).&#13;
Sand production potentials were estimated using G/Cb.&#13;
Four hydrocarbon reservoirs (A, B, C and D) were delineated. The NGR reduces from proximal to&#13;
distal due to reduction in depositional energy. The reservoirs were relatively clean with Vshale less&#13;
than 15.0% threshold. The Vshale increased in the direction of lower hydrodynamic flow. Reservoirs&#13;
were deposited in fluvial channel, progradational and deltaic sands. Dynamic Rock Physics&#13;
Template (RPT) showed pore pressure depletion in reservoirs A and D of A1 as well as A, B and&#13;
D of A2. The density increase was attributed to increasing G and K when brine replaced&#13;
hydrocarbon. Unconventional attenuation of Vp from 3.09-3.04, 3.13-3.08, 3.92-3.86, 3.53-3.49&#13;
and 3.87-3.80 km/s in A of A1 and A3, and D of A1, A2 and A3, respectively, were due to dissolved&#13;
gases. The values of E and K increased exponentially from 21.45-21.67 GPa and 16.93-18.28 GPa&#13;
in A of A2. The value of ʋ was higher in oil and brine but negligible in gas-sand. The G/Cb for all&#13;
reservoirs were greater than 0.8×1012 psi2 threshold. Increasing Sg resulted in reduction in E and&#13;
UCS. The observed pore pressure depletion from RPT could cause well instability due to induced&#13;
matrix stress. Anomalous behaviours of elastic parameters were attributed to dissolved gases, while&#13;
a decrease in UCS and E in A and D of A1 and A3 will cause wellbore collapse. None of the&#13;
reservoirs produced sand during hydrocarbon production. Enhanced recovery modeling generated&#13;
decreased K and E which reduced the stiffness and brittleness of the reservoirs.&#13;
Unconventional attenuation of compressional wave velocity and the responses of bulk modulus in&#13;
gas provided a pathway for prediction of reservoirs’ responses to changing fluid saturations during&#13;
hydrocarbon production. These models could be employed as templates for monitoring&#13;
hydrocarbon reservoir performance.
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Aug 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2141</guid>
<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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