"Geology of Carbonate Reservoirs: The Identification, Description and Characterization of Hydrocarbon Reservoirs in Carbonate Rocks" by Wayne M. Ahr
Wiley-Interscience | 2008 | ISBN: 0470164913 9780470164914 | 295 pages | PDF | 6 MB
Wiley-Interscience | 2008 | ISBN: 0470164913 9780470164914 | 295 pages | PDF | 6 MB
This book's goal is to help scientists explore and develop the vast resources in carbonate reservoirs more efficiently and economically. Though the book is written for petroleum geologists, geophysicists, and engineers and students in those fields, this is also a good reference for hydrogeologists and environmental geologists because reservoirs and aquifers differ only in the fluids they contain.
This reference presents the information scientists need to explore and develop carbonate reservoirs in the most efficient and profitable ways.
Covering everything from the basics to more sophisticated ways of assessing reservoirs, Geology of Carbonate Reservoirs:
• Explains how and where carbonate rocks form and how they do, or do not, become reservoirs
• Discusses reservoir properties—the interaction between rocks and fluids—and how rock properties influence saturation, wettability, capillarity, capillary pressure, and reservoir quality
• Covers depositional carbonate reservoirs, diagenetic carbonate reservoirs, and fractured reservoirs
• Offers a new genetic classification of carbonate porosity that helps scientists predict spatial distribution of porosity and permeability; it's a practical way of characterizing hydrocarbon reservoirs in carbonate rocks
• Helps scientists recognize, analyze, and map reservoirs and make more accurate volumetric calculations and economic forecasts
CONTENTS
PREFACE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
1 INTRODUCTION
2 CARBONATE RESERVOIR ROCK PROPERTIES
3 PETROPHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF CARBONATE RESERVOIRS
4 STRATIGRAPHIC PRINCIPLES
5 DEPOSITIONAL CARBONATE RESERVOIRS
6 DIAGENETIC CARBONATE RESERVOIRS
7 FRACTURED RESERVOIRS
8 SUMMARY: GEOLOGY OF CARBONATE RESERVOIRS
REFERENCES
INDEX
1st with TOC BookMarkLinks