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					 Definition of Fracture
					POROSITY A fracture is sometimes called a
                joint and, at the surface, are expressed as cracks or fissures
                in the rocks. The orientation of the fracture can be anywhere from horizontal
                to vertical. The rough surface separates the two faces, giving
                rise to fracture porosity. The surfaces touch at points called
                asperities. Altered rock surrounds each surface and may contain
					solution porosity. Infilling
                minerals may cover part or all of each surface . Minerals may fill
                the entire fracture, converting an open fracture to a healed or
                sealed fracture.
 
					 
 Fracture porosity is usually very
                small. Values between 0.0001 and 0.001 of rock volume are typical
                (0.01% to 0.1%). Fracture-related porosity, such as solution porosity
                in granite or carbonate reservoirs, may attain much larger values,
                but the porosity in the actual fracture is still very small.
 
				Fracture
                porosity is found accurately only by processing the formation
                micro-scanner curves for fracture aperture and fracture frequency
                (fracture intensity). Reservoir matrix porosity and
				permeability, including that attributed to fracture related
				(solution) porosity, can be found by normal porosity calculation
				methods. 
				Reservoir
                simulation software that accounts for the fracture system is often
                termed a “dual porosity” model. While this is strictly
                true, it would be better to think of them as “dual permeability”
                models, since the fracture permeability fed by the matrix or reservoir
                permeability is far more important than the relative storage capacity
                of the fractures and matrix porosity. A reservoir with only fracture
                porosity is quickly depleted; a decent reservoir in the matrix
                rock feeding into fractures will last much longer.
 
				
				 Fracture Porosity Definitions, showing fracture porosity (black, and
				fracture related porosity (black dots),
 
				Fractures are caused by stress in the formation, which in turn
				usually derives from tectonic forces such as folds and faults.
				These are termed natural fractures, as opposed to induced
				fractures. Induced fractures are created by drilling stress or
				by purposely fracturing a reservoir by hydraulic pressure from
				surface equipment. Both kinds of fractures are economically important.
                Induced fractures may connect the wellbore to natural fractures
                that would otherwise not contribute to flow capacity. 
			
			
			
			
			 Fracture
			POROSITY And PERMEABILITY from APERTURE DATA 
  Resistivity
				image logs are widely used to assess fracture aperture.
				Unfortunately, the image tends to exaggerate fracture aperture,
				especially for very small fractures. The fracture noted on the
				image at the right looks to be about 1 mm aperture (black streak
				on the image). This is about the minimum size that  a
				fracture can appear on a log because of the pixel density of the
				image, electrode spacing on the tool, and erosion of the
				wellbore adjacent to the fracture. The fracture frequency may
				also be exaggerated if the dip correlation processing picks the
				same fracture at different depthsIf fracture dios are
			hand-picked, fracture frequency will be more accurate. 
			Fracture aperture exaggeration on acoustic image logs is even more
			severe and these logs probably should not be used for aperture
			estimation.
                 These
			visual difficulties can be overcome with a post-processing technique
			that uses a resistivity inversion model and the mud filtrate
			resistivity to calculate aperture, independent of any visual
			artifacts. 
			The algorithm
                is based on the concept that higher electrical conductivity means a larger
                open fracture. The fracture aperture and fracture frequency can
                be combined to obtain fracture porosity and fracture permeability.1.
                            PHIf = 0.001 * Wf * Df * KF1
 
 The fracture permeability equations are attributed to Dr Zoltan
			Barlai:
 2: Kfrac = 833 * 10^11 * PHIfrac^3 / (Df^2 * KF1^2)
 3: Kfrac = 833 * 10^5 * PHIfrac * Wf^2
 4: Kfrac = 833 * 10^2 * Wf^3 * Df * KF1
 Where:
                KF1 = number of main fracture directions
 = 1 for sub-horizontal or sub-vertical
 = 2 for orthogonal sub-vertical
 = 3 for chaotic or brecciated
 PHIfrac = fracture porosity (fractional)
 Df = fracture frequency (fractures per meter)
 Wf = fracture aperture (millimeters)
 Kfrac = fracture permeability (millidarcies)
 
				Note:
                Equations 2, 3, and 4 give identical results. 
				
				NUMERICAL EXAMPLEDf = 1 fracture per meter
 Wf = 1.0 millimeters
 PHIfrac = 0.001 * 1 * 1 = 0.001 fractional (0.1%)
 Kfrac = 833 * 100 * 1^3 * 1 * 1 = 83300 millidarcies
 
				Df = 10 fractures per meter Wf = 0.1 millimeters
 PHIfrac = 0.001 * 10 * 0.1 = 0.001 fractional (0.1%)
 Kfrac = 833 * 100 * 0.1^3 * 10 * 1 = 833 millidarcies
 These
                examples represent well fractured reservoirs. You can see that
                the volume of hydrocarbon is very small but the permeability is
                very high.  These
                examples represent well fractured reservoirs. You can see that
                the volume of hydrocarbon is very small but the permeability is
                very high.  If
                you believe that the phrase “fracture porosity” is
                a literal definition, then this porosity will usually be pretty
                small - in the order of 0.0001 to 0.01 fractional porosity (0.01
                to 1.0%). If you believe that the phrase includes vuggy and solution
                porosity related to the presence of fractures, then the value
                could be much higher. The important thing is to recognize that
                there are two definitions for “fracture porosity”. 
			
			
			
			 Calculating Fracture APERTURE FROM IMAGE LOG DATA There are two methods that can be used to determine fracture
				aperture from image logs. One is to use image processing
				techniques to "count pixels". By scanning an image and counting
				the darkest black pixels, and a little judicious use of
				geometry, the volume of the fractures seen in the image can be
				estimated.  The method is very sensitive to the trigger
				level used to descriminate the fracture from surrounding
				borehole roughness or breakouts. Overestimation is a common
				outcome. The approach is cheap, easy, and often wrong.
 
			 Conventional petrophysical analysis with fracture aperture (Track 2
			- shaded pink) and fracture porosity (Track 4- shaded oink) both
			derived from image analysis methods. Note the low resistivity spike
			on the fracture in the center of the log section, caused by mud
			filtrate invasion into the fracture.
 A more
			accurate approach is based on finite element analysis of the
			resistivity image data. as described in 
			 "Fracture Apertures from
			Electrical Borehole Scans", S. M. Luthi and P. Souhaite,
			Geophysics, Vo1.55, No.7, July, 1990, pp.821-833. The math is beyond
			me and beyond the scope of this article. The method is available
			from some service companies.
			An
                example of a fracture aperture log from a program called Frac-View
                is shown below.  
				
				 Fracture frequency, aperture, and porosity log in a
				fractured granite reservoir derived from
				a resistivity image log. The most accurate method is based on
				the measured resistivity curves on the image log. The pixel count method is much less accurate
			because of borehole erosion and breakouts.
 
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