The exploration and development of hydrocarbon resources in the Western Desert require more continuous activities. The Silah is a newly discovered field in this region. Therefore, this study emphasizes the application of petrophysical evaluation to sandstone and carbonate reservoirs from the late and early Cretaceous. These formations are the most potential hydrocarbon reservoirs in the studied area as a part of the western desert. Additionally, this study involves a comparative evaluation of the Abu Roash, Bahariya, and Kharita reservoirs using well-logging data by applying different cross-plots that are used for determining different petrophysical parameters such as shale volume, porosity, fluid saturation, permeability, and net-to-gross ratio. These logs are gamma-ray (GR), calliper, resistivity (RLA5, RLA3, and RXOZ), photoelectric effect (PEFZ), neutron (APLC), and density (RHOZ). These plots agree with the results deduced from the interpretation of lithologic logs. Fourteen hydrocarbon-bearing zones are identified in the Silah field. Only two zones, namely, Zone 2 in Silah-15 and Zone 1 in South Silah-1X, are considered the best for hydrocarbon generation. These zones are characterized by low to moderate shale volume, moderate to high total porosity, good effective porosity, low water saturation, and high net-to-gross ratio. These zones lie in the Abu Roash/F member. These deduced points prove that the Abu Roash/F member can be an abundant hydrocarbon reservoir. This member in the Silah field appears to be a promising hydrocarbon reservoir because it matches the petrophysical parameters of the investigated zones and others in the northwestern Desert. This suggests that there may be reservoir continuity and similarity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-83332-4 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
January 2025
New Valley University, El-Kharga, 72512, New Valley, Egypt.
The exploration and development of hydrocarbon resources in the Western Desert require more continuous activities. The Silah is a newly discovered field in this region. Therefore, this study emphasizes the application of petrophysical evaluation to sandstone and carbonate reservoirs from the late and early Cretaceous.
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January 2025
Young Researchers and Elite Club, Omidiyeh Branch, Islamic Azad University, Omidiyeh, Iran.
Precise estimation of rock petrophysical parameters are seriously important for the reliable computation of hydrocarbon in place in the underground formations. Therefore, accurately estimation rock saturation exponent is necessary in this regard. In this communication, we aim to develop intelligent data-driven models of decision tree, random forest, ensemble learning, adaptive boosting, support vector machine and multilayer perceptron artificial neural network to predict rock saturation exponent parameter in terms of rock absolute permeability, porosity, resistivity index, true resistivity, and water saturation based on acquired 1041 field data.
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November 2024
Department of Petroleum Engineering, Faculty of Petroleum, Gas and Petrochemical Engineering, Persian Gulf University, Bushehr, 75169-13817, Iran.
Sci Rep
November 2024
Geophysics Department, Faculty of Science, Cairo University, Giza, 12613, Egypt.
In the northern section of the Western Desert, there are many extremely profitable petroleum and natural gas deposits in the Abu EL-Gharadig Basin. This study aims to highlight the hydrocarbon potential of Abu Roash F Formation, which stands for high organic content unconventional tight reservoirs, and Abu Roash G Formation which stands for conventional sand reservoirs, in Sitra field located in the central-western part of the Abu EL-Gharadig Basin. The research employed well-log data from four wells to ascertain petrophysical properties combined with core samples of two wells for a comprehensive examination and description of lithology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPore structure can affect the reservoir property, petrophysics, and fluid migration/adsorption, which is critical for shale evaluation and development. In this paper, the pore structure, fractal characteristics, and their influencing factors on low-resistivity shale (LRS) from the Longmaxi Formation in the Southern Sichuan Basin were analyzed by combining geochemistry experiments, physical property analysis, X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), N/CO gas adsorption experiments, and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The results indicate that in LRS, the layered clay mineral/pyrite distribution and more developed pores with a larger size and better connectivity can build a complex and superior conductive network.
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