Subseismic-Scale Reservoir Deformation
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A review of deformation bands in reservoir sandstones: geometries, mechanisms and distribution Available to Purchase
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Published:January 01, 2018
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CiteCitation
Haakon Fossen, Roger Soliva, Gregory Ballas, Barbara Trzaskos, Carolina Cavalcante, Richard A. Schultz, 2018. "A review of deformation bands in reservoir sandstones: geometries, mechanisms and distribution", Subseismic-Scale Reservoir Deformation, M. Ashton, S. J. Dee, O. P. Wennberg
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Abstract
Deformation bands are common subseismic structures in porous sandstones that vary with respect to deformation mechanisms, geometries and distribution. The amount of cataclasis involved largely determines how they impact fluid flow, and cataclasis is generally promoted by coarse grain size, good sorting, high porosity and overburden (usually >500–1000 m). Most bands involve a combination of shear and compaction, and a distinction can be made between those where shear displacement greatly exceeds compaction (compactional shear bands or CSB), where the two are of similar magnitude (shear-enhanced compaction bands or SECB), and pure compaction bands (PCB). The latter two only occur in the contractional regime, are characterized by high (70–100°) dihedral angles (SECB) or perpendicularity (PCB) to σ1 (the maximum principal stress) and are restricted to layers with very high porosity. Contraction generally tends to produce populations of well-distributed deformation bands, whereas in the extensional regime the majority of bands are clustered around faults. Deformation bands also favour highly porous parts of a reservoir, which may result in a homogenization of the overall reservoir permeability and enhance sweep during hydrocarbon production. A number of intrinsic and external variables must therefore be considered when assessing the influence of deformation bands on reservoir performance.
- cataclasis
- clastic rocks
- compaction
- compression tectonics
- computed tomography data
- contraction
- controls
- deformation
- depth
- displacements
- distribution
- Emery County Utah
- extension
- extension tectonics
- faults
- fluid flow
- folds
- geometry
- grain size
- host rocks
- kinematics
- mechanism
- orientation
- permeability
- porosity
- porous materials
- precursors
- reservoir properties
- reservoir rocks
- sandstone
- sedimentary rocks
- shear
- size distribution
- structural analysis
- tectonics
- thickness
- three-dimensional models
- United States
- Utah
- San Rafael Desert
- Goblin Valley
- damage zone