Abstract

Shale oil reservoirs differ from conventional reservoirs in several aspects, including the sedimentary model, accumulation mechanism, and reservoir characteristics, which pose significant challenges to their exploration and development. Therefore, identifying the location of optimal spots is crucial for the successful exploration and development of shale oil reservoirs. Mobility, particularly in low-permeability shale oil reservoirs with nano-scale pores, is a crucial petrophysical property that determines the development plan. However, two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (2D-NMR) is expensive and has limited applicability, although it can estimate shale oil mobility. Hence, it is of great significance to find a precise method for evaluating shale oil mobility using conventional logging. In this paper, we propose a new method for assessing shale oil mobility based on free oil porosity derived from the difference in flowing porosity detected at different ranges of logging, utilizing the Maxwell conductivity model and conductivity efficiency theory. Our study shows that longitudinal-T2 (T1-T2) NMR logging can accurately evaluate the mobility of shale oil. This is demonstrated by comparing the processing results obtained from our proposed method with those from 2D-NMR and laboratory NMR experiments. The predicted results based on conventional well logs also show good agreement with experimental results, confirming the effectiveness and reliability of our new method. Our proposed method carries reference significance for evaluating shale oil reservoir quality.

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