Abstract

Abstract A laboratory technique was developed for measuring directional resistivity of a right cylindrical sample at ambient or reservoir stress state conditions. A simulation study was conducted to determine the geometric factor required in converting sample radial resistance to resistivity and the method validated using finite-element numerical simulation. The technique was found useful in investigating resistivity anisotropy and the effect of different stress states on the directional resistivity of small scale cylindrical samples and applied to the measurement of axial and radial resistivities at elevated hydrostatic stress states and triaxial stress state to failure. The resistivity was found to increase with hydrostatic stress increase but then decrease when the axial stress exceeded the confining stress and sharply decrease at failure. Similarly, a decrease in porosity was observed with increasing hydrostatic stress then a sharp increase found at failure.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call