Abstract

The continental shale oil reservoir of Fengcheng Formation in the northern slope area of Mahu Sag, Junggar Basin, Western China is very heterogeneous in lithology. Thus, the complex response characteristics of conventional logging and limited core availability in the study area has led to major challenges in lithology identification. Therefore, to resolve lithology identification by well logs in continental shale oil reservoirs, a graph neural network (GNN) method named GraphSAGE is used to train the lithology identification model based on a constructed graph, which connects the samples with adjacent depth and similar log response features on operator intention. The identification process is divided into two parts: first, based on the formation depth sequence and affinity propagation clustering method, the vertical distribution of the stratum and nodes logging curve similarity information are integrated into the graph structure, which structurally represents the conventional logging curves as graph instead of well logs as input data; Second, the nodes of the constructed graph are classified by GraphSAGE, which naturally supports combination generalization and improves sample complexity accompanied by strong relational inductive bias. To examine the effectiveness of GraphSAGE for lithology identification, a conventional log dataset labelled by direct core observations from two separate wells in Muhu Sag are used. The identification results showed that the accuracy of GraphSAGE for the lithologies exceeds 90% of the testing data, especially for transitional lithology such as dolomitic mudstone, silty mudstone and tuffaceous fine sandstone. Compared with the commonly used machine learning methods such as SVM, RF and XGBoost, GraphSAGE was more accurate in lithology identification, matching core observations. Collectively, this reflects the superiority of graph neural network in conventional logging lithology identification and effective means provided for lithology identification of continental shale oil reservoir in the Mahu Sag.

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