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SEDIMENT COMPACTION - THE BARENTS SEA ROCK PROPERTIES (BARROCK) PROJECT, Jens Jahren, N. H. Mondol & B. Thyberg Project presentation and some results from earlier and ongoing compaction studies at the University of Oslo BarRock • Barents Sea Rock Properties (BarRock) • Objectives: To analyze rock property distributions in shales and sandstones in the uplifted Barents Sea area. To study Porosity, permeability, seal integrity and deformation related to primary and secondary petroleum migration in an uplifted cemented sedimentary sequences. University of Oslo, Department of Geosciences Partner - Norwegian Geotechnical Institute Additional cooperation with Russia and USA Financed by PETROMAKS and University of Oslo Start 2010-06 End 2014-09 (UiO PhD) • • • • • • • • Associated project: ”Cementation and Rock Properties in Organic Rich Siliciclastic Rocks” financed by ConocoPhillips • The project aims to integrate sedimentology, diagenesis, geomechanical properties, rock physics, structural geology and geophysical/seismic properties to better understand the behavior of sedimentary rocks in an uplifted area and how the fluids and fluid movement are affected during uplift. • The challenge is to relate geology to geophysics where no satisfactory quantitative relations exist between different sedimentary rocks and their geophysical properties. • Experimental compaction tests have provided a basis for understanding rock mechanical properties of different sediments. • Studies of cemented rocks show that quartz cementation dominate porosity loss below a depth corresponding to about 70 oC. Cementation processes continue also during uplift if the temperature is higher than about 70 oC. • Quantification of these potentially important stress relaxing cementation processes during uplift has not been addressed in detail before. Stress relaxation from cementation would reduce brittle deformation due to stress redistribution related to uplift processes proposed for the Barents Sea Area (e.g Makurat et al.1992). Work Packages (WP’s) • WP1: Sedimentology, fluid migration, compaction and cementation (PI: Jens Jahren) • WP2: Rock mechanical testing, rock physics and seismic modeling and quantitative seismic interpretation (PI: Nazmul Haque Mondol) • WP3: Structural geology in relation to rock properties – case study (PI: Roy Helge Gabrielsen) • WP4: Regional uplift and erosion in relation to rock properties (PI: Jan Inge Faleide) • WP5: Integration and synthesis – Barents Sea Petroleum system (all PI’s) • PhD students (WP1 – financed by UiO, WP2 – financed by PETROMAKS) Compaction of sediments (and rock stiffening) in subsiding basins involves both mechanical and chemical processes • During early burial siliceous sediments compact mostly mechanically (2-3 km/60-80 ◦C). Mechanical compaction is governed by increasing effective stress resulting in volume reduction due to rearrangements or breaking of grains. • Chemical compaction is a function of thermodynamics and kinetics and are rather insensitive to the effective stress. Mechanical compaction (effective stress) Bjørlykke, 1998 Diagenetic processes during burial Time 10 Uplift Extension Brittle deformation 40 Mechanical compaction 70 Chemical compaction (quartz cementation 110 Temperature 140 Integrated Time Temperature Illitization of kaolinite and K-feldspar Porosity Chemical compaction continues also during uplift at temperatures higher than about 60◦C Continued chemical compaction during uplift Bjørlykke 2010 Velocity-depth trends in the Barents Sea area is clearly affected by Chemical processes during uplift Sonic velocity measurements with depth) from the Haltenbanken area Sonic velocity measurements the Barents Sea area Storvoll (2005) Experimental mechanical compaction Time (Hours) 600 Time needed to maintain drained condition for different clay aggregates 400 200 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Smectite (100%) Smectite (80%), Kaolinite Smectite (60%), Kaolinite Smectite (40%), Kaolinite Smectite (20%), Kaolinite Kaolinite (100%) (20%) (40%) (60%) (80%) Vertical Effective Stress (MPa) Mondol et al. 2008a,b Compression Porosity (%) 0 20 40 60 80 Vertical Effective Stress (MPa) 0 Kalonite: 20% Smectite: 42% 10 20 30 40 Kaolinite (100%) Smectite (20%), Kaolinite Smectite (40%), Kaolinite Smectite (60%), Kaolinite Smectite (80%), Kaolinite Smectite (100%) (80%) (60%) (40%) (20%) 50 Mondol et al. 2008a,b 2500 Velocity-porosity relationship Velocity (m/ s) 2000 Kaolinite (100%) Smectite (20%), Kaolinite Smectite (40%), Kaolinite Smectite (60%), Kaolinite Smectite (80%), Kaolinite Smectite (100%) 1500 1000 (80%) (60%) (40%) (20%) 500 10 20 30 40 50 Stress-velocity relationships 60 Porosity (%) 1000 2200 800 Vs (m/ s) Vp (m/ s) 2000 1800 600 1600 400 1400 200 0 20 40 Vertical Effective Stress (MPa) 0 10 20 30 40 50 Vertical Effective Stress (MPa) Mondol et al. 2008a,b Mondol et al 2008a Mondol et al. 2008a Rock stiffening Mondol et al. 2008b Mechanical and chemical compaction in Sandstones -Etive Formation, North Sea Lab experiments on loose Etive sand representing mechanical compaction only. Deviation from mechanical compaction trend represent chemical compaction (quartz cementation). Marcussen et al 2009 How quartz cementation in sandstones works Intra granular volume (IGV) is not much affected by quartz cementation indicating that dissolution at stylolites is the main contributer of silica (passive innfilling between grains. Marcussen et al 2009 Chemical compaction in mudstones • Quartz cementation and clay mineral transformations - The simplified reaction equations below illustrate the two most important clay mineral reactions: – Smectite + K+ = Illite + Silica + H20 (e.g., Boles and Franks, 1979). • taking place between about 60-100 ºC – Kaolinite + K+ = Illite + Silica + H20 (e.g., Bjørlykke et al.,1995) • taking place at temperatures greater than 120-140 ºC – The reactions requires a potassium source (K-feldspar) and silica removal (precipitation or transport out of the system) to proceed (e.g., Bjørlykke and Aagaard, 1992). How smectite affect compaction (measured as velocity - all samples buried to similar depth/temperature) Marcussen et al. 2009 Mudstone velocity depth trends – North Sea Hordaland group – smectite rich Marcussen et al. 2009a Smectite even affect reflectivity – red curve represent bulk smectite Marcussen et al. 2009a Mudstones - Norwegian Sea Depth (msf) How clay mineralogy affect both mechanical and chemical compaction 0 0 0 1000 1000 1000 2000 2000 2000 3000 3000 3000 4000 4000 4000 5000 5000 5000 0 0.2 0.4 PHI 0.6 0.8 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 Vp 1.6 2 2.4 2.8 RHOB Peltonen et al., 2009 0-1000 m – Mechanical compaction of glacial clays 1000-2000 m - Mechanical compaction of smectite rich clays 2000- 3500 m – Chemical compaction (quartz cementation and illite formation Blue compaction curve – Experimental compaction of 75% kaolinite-25% silt sample Quartz cementation in mudstones Petrographic evidences of microquartz crystals Micro-quartz crystals embedded in the fine-grained clay matrix Well 33/5-2, 2370 m/75◦C CL-response from microquartz indicate an authigenic quartz origin CL-response of the detrital grain is taken from Peltonen et al. (2009) EDS spectrum of the illitized clay matrix chemistry (un-filled) and the micro-quartz crystals (filled) Thyberg et al. 2009). Micro-quartz cement embedded in the fine-grained clay matrix Well 33/5-2, 2570 m/80◦C (right) Below approx 2500 m/80-85◦C: inter-grown aggregates of micro-quartz and clay crystals typically dominate (bottom left) Continuous quartz cement growth. Well 6505/10-1, 2620m/90-95◦C (bottom right) Quartz cement platelets representing formation of incipient schistosity (quartz outlined in green)- Well 6505/10-1, 4300 m/150◦C Thyberg and Jahren 2010