Abstract

Summary Open literature and new experimental compaction data from five reservoir and 16 outcrop sandstones are used to delineate the near-elastic, inelastic, and failure domains in 3D-stress space for porosity classes of 5 to 15%, 15 to 25%, and 25 to 35%. Applications of this compaction-domain model include the analysis of the extent of the near-elastic domain (where elasticity theory can be used to describe and predict rock deformation), the pore-volume compressibility (Cpp), and the permeability reduction as a function of reservoir stress path. This is illustrated for a well-consolidated sandstone reservoir with an average porosity of approximately 18%. Two aspects of dynamic reservoir modeling in the near-elastic domain are addressed: calculation of Cpp from raw volumetric-compaction data as a function of isotropic total stress change, and the correction of Cpp for a nonhydrostatic reservoir stress path. Open-literature work combined with our experimental data indicates that the compaction-induced permeability reduction of 15 to 25% porosity sandstone in the near-elastic domain depends predominantly on the increase of the effective mean stress, not on the reservoir stress path.

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