Abstract

Summary A new method for generating realistic homogenous and heterogeneous 3-D pore-scale sandstone models is presented. The essence of our method is to build sandstone models which are analogs of actual sandstones by numerically modelling the results of the main sandstone-forming geological processes - sandgrain sedimentation, compaction, and diagenesis. The input data for the modelling are obtained from image analyses of thin section images of the actual sandstone. The spatial continuity of the sandstone model in the X, Y, and Z directions is determined using a scale-independent invasion percolation based algorithm. The resulting spatial continuity function, which is an ellipsoid, may be used as a heterogeneity descriptor for the sandstone model. Heterogeneity analyses show that compaction reduces the spatial continuity in the horizontal direction more rapidly than in the vertical one. The architecture and geometry of the network representation of the pore space are determined by applying various 3-D image analysis algorithms directly on the fully characterised sandstone model. A 3-D pore network which was generated from thin section data from a strongly water wet Bentheimer sandstone is used as input to a two-phase network flow simulator. Simulated transport properties for the sandstone model are in good agreement with those determined experimentally.

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