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Diagenetic controls on reservoir quality in the Miocene carbonate reservoir interval, offshore Myanmar |
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| รหัสดีโอไอ | |
| Creator | Chutchai Thiangtham |
| Title | Diagenetic controls on reservoir quality in the Miocene carbonate reservoir interval, offshore Myanmar |
| Contributor | - |
| Publisher | Department of Geology, Chulalongkorn University |
| Publication Year | 2562 |
| Journal Title | Bulletin of Earth Sciences of Thailand (BEST) |
| Journal Vol. | 11 |
| Journal No. | 2 |
| Page no. | 13-24 |
| Keyword | Miocene carbonate, diagenetic control, diagenetically evolved, diagenetic overprints, reservoir quality of carbonate. |
| URL Website | https://www.bestjournal.org/ |
| Website title | Bulletin of Earth Sciences of Thailand |
| ISSN | 1906-280X |
| Abstract | Based on long-term production from the giant Yadana gas field proving the presence of significant hydrocarbons in Miocene carbonates in the offshore of Myanmar, 10 wells were drilled Miocene carbonates in the study area in order to test the hydrocarbon potential. The study area is located some 80 to 100 kilometers from the Yadana gas field. The wells intersected a heterogeneous mix of Middle Miocene carbonates, deposited atop volcanics or volcaniclastic sediments. The wells show variable production tests in these potential reservoirs, likely responding to reservoir complexity and variable charge. A depositional model of the study area was by constructed by PTTEP in order to explain the relationship between well locations and well test performances. The result of their study suggested reservoir quality and well test performance can be related to depositionally-controlled facies belts. But this study demonstrates that not only depositional environment influences the reservoir properties, an additional, perhaps over-riding factor is diagenesis, which can be quantified across the various wells using stable isotope analysis of core and cuttings. The carbon and oxygen stable isotope determinations, which can be related to diagenetic intensity, is a new approach, not done before in the study area. And so, this study focuses on reservoir quality in the Middle Miocene carbonate, not in terms of depositional setting, but in an additional framework of diagenetic overprints and rock-fluid evolution.The isotope results suggest some sediments in the study area are in part influenced by calcite cements precipitated from circulating hydrothermal waters, moving through volcanic rocks beneath the Middle Miocene carbonate interval, and by regional burial-driven limestone recrystallization, which has significantly decreased potential reservoir quality. When results are compared to the Yadana isotope data, Yadana's reservoir is less diagenetically evolved, and experienced shallower burial with flushing by cooler burial fluids. Accordingly, there is a less pervasive diagenetic shutdown of porosity and permeability. When the study area results are plotted against isotope signatures of other south-east Asian carbonate reservoir with similar ages, it proves that diagenesis is likely to influence reservoir quality and well performance more than the porosity distribution pattern defined in the original depositional environment. |