Abstract

The lower Silurian Qusaiba Shale is one of the major source rocks for Paleozoic oil/gas reservoirs in Saudi Arabia and recently considered a potential unconventional shale gas resource. The study aims to evaluate the reservoir heterogeneity and production potential of Qusaiba Shale through the integration of geological, geomechanical and fractures characteristics. Three lithofacies were identified in Qusaiba shale. Mineralogical composition resulted in variable amounts of quartz ranging from 39 to 40, 45–55 and 60–78% for Lithofacies-I, II and III, respectively. Inter-granular porosity of these lithofacies is very low; however, fractures along laminations, at angle with laminations, and few micro-faults enhance porosity up to 5–6, 2–3, and < 1% in Lithofacies-I, II and III, respectively. The Lithofacies-I hosts the lowest fracture density (1.2 fractures/foot), likely due to the relatively lower quartz content (39%) as compared to other lithofacies. The fracture densities in Lithofacies-II and III are 2.1 and 3.2 fractures/foot, respectively. Lithofacies-I exhibits low stiffness in terms of low Young’s modulus (average 26 GPa) and high Poisson’s ratio (average 0.34). Mineralogy- and elastic parameters-based brittleness indices exhibited ductile behavior of this lithofacies. The brittleness index exhibited brittle behavior for silica-rich Lithofacies-III and has highest intensity of natural fractures. Hence, it is concluded that mineralogy and geological characteristics are the main controlling factors on shale brittleness, mechanical properties and fractures characteristics. The integration of geology, mineralogy and geomechanics plays the key role to better evaluate the prospectivity of shale reservoirs.

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