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One of the saturation from resistivity models:

(1) \frac{1}{R_t} = \phi_t^m s_{wt}^n \, \left[ \frac{1}{R_w} +\frac{1}{s_{wt}} \frac{1}{R_{sh}} \right]

and saturation is given by

(2) s_w = \frac{s_{wt} - s_{wb}}{ 1 - s_{wb}}
(3) s_{wb}= \frac{V_{wb}}{V_t}
(4) \frac{1}{R_{sh}} = s_{wb} \left( \frac{1}{R_{wb}} - \frac{1}{R_w} \right)

where

s_w

formation water saturation

s_{wb}

bound water saturation


\phi_e

effective porosity

V_{sh}

shaliness

R_t

total measured resistivity from OH logs

R_w

formation water resistivity

R_{sh}

wet clay resistivity

A


dimensionless constant, characterising the rock matrix contribution to the total electrical resistivity

0.5 ÷ 1, default value is 1 for sandstones and 0.9 for limestones

m

formation matrix cementation exponent1.5 ÷ 2.5, default value is 2

n

formation matrix water-saturation exponent

1.5 ÷ 2.5, default value is 2


In some practical cases, the clay resisitvity R_{sh} can be expressed as:

(5) \frac{1}{R_{sh}} = B \cdot Q_V

where

B

conductance per cat-ion (mho · cm2/meq)

Q_V

Cation Exchange Capacity (meq/ml)

and both can be measured in laboratory.


The other model parameters still need calibration on core data.


See Also


Petroleum Industry / Upstream / Subsurface E&P Disciplines / Petrophysics

Well & Reservoir Surveillance / Well logging / Reservoir Data Logs (RDL) / Formation Resistivity Log @model

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