Abstract
Tight oil is a great potential resource for unconventional oil exploration and development. Determining the content of adsorbed tight oil in sandstone reservoirs and the factors controlling its content is crucial for the evaluation and development of tight oil resources. Using fluorescence petrography, environmental scanning electron microscopy, porosity as well as permeability analyses, high-pressure mercury intrusion, and nuclear magnetic resonance imaging, the present study analyzed the occurrence form, location, and relative content of free and adsorbed tight oils and effect of controlling factors on the content of adsorbed tight oil in sandstone reservoirs of the Chang 8 member in the Huaqing area of the Ordos Basin. The free tight oil mainly exists in residual intergranular, intergranular dissolved, intragranular dissolved, and dissolution-enlarged pores as well as some throats in the form of flakes with various areas and slender strips. The adsorbed tight oil mainly occurs on the surfaces of the mineral particles and mica fragments as well as in fractures, some throats or the intragranular as well as intergranular dissolved pores in the form of films with variable thicknesses and long strips. The lower limit of the pore radius at which free tight oil occurs in sandstone is approximately 0.1 μm and the adsorbed tight oil occurs on the surface of mineral particles and in spaces with pore radii of 0.02–0.3 μm. The contribution of free tight oil to total tight oil in the present study has highest and lowest content of 60.95% and 32.48%, respectively, with an average content of 50.14%. The contribution of adsorbed tight oil to total tight oil has highest and lowest content of 67.52% and 39.05%, respectively, with an average content of 49.86%. The content of adsorbed tight oil is generally proportional to the median pressure and inversely proportional to the porosity as well as permeability of the reservoir; particularly, porosity is relevant. The content of adsorbed tight oil is inversely proportional to the quartz content and directly proportional to the feldspar, carbonate cement, and clay mineral content of the sandstone.
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