Authigenic minerals related to wettability and their impacts on oil accumulation in tight sandstone reservoirs: An example from the Lower Cretaceous Quantou Formation in the southern Songliao Basin, China

2018 
Abstract Oil accumulation, being difficult and complicated, is an important issue in petroleum exploration researches. Authigenic minerals, such as carbonate cements and chlorite, can in certain reservoirs alter the wettability of some pore spaces from water-wet to oil-wet. Generally, these oil-wet pore spaces are favorable for oil accumulation. The alteration of reservoir wettability induced by authigenic minerals and the impacts on oil accumulation in tight sandstone reservoirs were investigated using a suite of mineralogical and geochemical characterization techniques, including thin section observation, SEM-EDS, XRD, QEMSEM, CL, quantitative grain fluorescence (QGF), fluorescence spectral analysis, contact angle measurement and sealed coring oil saturation testing on the fourth member of the Lower Cretaceous Quantou Formation (K 1 q 4 ) in the southern Songliao Basin, China. The study shows that the tight sandstone reservoirs are compositionally immature with detrital grains distributed homogeneously. Quartz, carbonates and clay minerals that show heterogeneous distribution characteristics are the major authigenic minerals in some parts of the intergranular pores. The detrital mineral assemblage suggests that the reservoir rocks at deposition and before diagenesis had characterized by strong water-wet properties. With the development of authigenic minerals, carbonate cements and authigenic chlorite tend to alter the wettability of some parts of the existing pore spaces from water-wet to oil-wet. In the K 1 q 4 sandstone reservoirs, oil prefers to accumulate in the cemented residual pore spaces around carbonate cements and chlorite. Reservoirs containing about 4–5% carbonate cements are suggested to be more preferable to oil accumulation. These reservoirs are mainly located between sandstone-mudstone interfaces and central parts of the sand bodies. Chlorites have mainly two effects: on one hand, chlorite alters the wettability of existing pore spaces and provides preferential accumulation sites for oil in the tight sandstone reservoirs, on the other hand it can reduce the adhesion of oil through forming “clay-oil flocs” and promote further migration. Consequently, the reservoirs with moderate amount of carbonate cements or chlorite always show relative high oil saturation in the K 1 q 4 tight sandstones.
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