Selection of Rw from Various Sources
Water resistivity data can be sparse or overwhelming, depending
on where you are working at the moment. The usual sources in order
of preference are:
1.
Produced water from the zone being analyzed in the same well or
nearby offset wells, analyzed for Rw in the lab.
2.
Drill stem test or perf test water from the zone being analyzed
in the same well or nearby offset wells, analyzed for Rw in the
lab. The test should produce at least 1000 ft (300 m) of water
before using the data, to prevent mud filtrate contamination from
causing errors. The sample should be from the bottom of the test.
3.
Produced or DST water from a nearby zone in the same geologic
horizon (do not cross erosional boundaries), analyzed as above.
4.
Water catalogues produced by local well log societies or government
agencies.
5.
Back calculated from log data in clean water bearing zone in the
same well or nearby offset well (Rwa or Ro method).
6.
Back calculated from nearby water bearing zone in same geologic
horizon.
7.
Calculated from SP in clean water bearing zone in same or nearby
zone in same well or nearby offset well.
8.
If no water has ever been produced in the area, back calculated
from a laboratory measured or assumed PHIxSW product.
9.
Local rule of thumb for water resistivity versus depth or versus
geologic horizon.
Do
not use:
1.
Water from a DST or perf test that recovered mostly filtrate water
(check water chemistry) or recovered only a small amount of water.
2.
SP or Rwa in a shaly zone.
3.
SP or Rwa in a hydrocarbon bearing zone.
4.
SP in a carbonate or evaporite sequence.
5.
SP in a low porosity zone.
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