2018
DOI: 10.1002/2017jb015138
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Archie's Saturation Exponent for Natural Gas Hydrate in Coarse‐Grained Reservoirs

Abstract: Accurately quantifying the amount of naturally occurring gas hydrate in marine and permafrost environments is important for assessing its resource potential and understanding the role of gas hydrate in the global carbon cycle. Electrical resistivity well logs are often used to calculate gas hydrate saturations, Sh, using Archie's equation. Archie's equation, in turn, relies on an empirical saturation parameter, n. Though n = 1.9 has been measured for ice‐bearing sands and is widely used within the hydrate comm… Show more

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Cited by 102 publications
(56 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
(117 reference statements)
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“…In general, the presence of hydrate increases the seismic velocity (Helgerud et al, 1999) and electrical resistivity (Edwards, 1997) of host sediments; this depends on the amount of hydrate occupying the pore space (saturation) and hydrate morphology, that is, spatial distribution of the hydrate grains within the host sediment (e.g., Dai et al, 2012;Ecker et al, 2000;Priest et al, 2005;Waite et al, 2009). In particular, geophysical remote sensing methods use elastic wave velocity and electrical resistivity anomalies to quantify hydrates in marine sediments, based on rock physics models that relate these anomalies to hydrate content (e.g., Collett, 2001;Cook & Waite, 2018;Doveton, 2001;Ecker et al, 2000;Edwards, 1997;Helgerud et al, 1999;Spangenberg, 2001).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, the presence of hydrate increases the seismic velocity (Helgerud et al, 1999) and electrical resistivity (Edwards, 1997) of host sediments; this depends on the amount of hydrate occupying the pore space (saturation) and hydrate morphology, that is, spatial distribution of the hydrate grains within the host sediment (e.g., Dai et al, 2012;Ecker et al, 2000;Priest et al, 2005;Waite et al, 2009). In particular, geophysical remote sensing methods use elastic wave velocity and electrical resistivity anomalies to quantify hydrates in marine sediments, based on rock physics models that relate these anomalies to hydrate content (e.g., Collett, 2001;Cook & Waite, 2018;Doveton, 2001;Ecker et al, 2000;Edwards, 1997;Helgerud et al, 1999;Spangenberg, 2001).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pore water salinity was set to be seawater values, in keeping with pore fluid salinities found in core samples at nearby ODP Site 1013 (Shipboard Scientific Party, 1997). If we consider that m could be as low as 2.4 (based on the variations seen by Cook & Waite, 2018) and that our resistivity contrast is a lower bound, we can estimate a lower bound of gas in place to be about 20 Tcf. Clearly, access to even a single well log from this basin would tighten these bound considerably.…”
Section: Hydrate Saturation and Volumementioning
confidence: 97%
“…A calibration study is also provided by Cook and Waite (), who determine hydrate saturations from electrical resistivity measurements via Archie's equation. Instead of focusing on laboratory resistivity studies on a variety of HBS (e.g., Du Frane et al, ; Lee, Santamarina, et al, ; Priegnitz et al, ; Santamarina & Ruppel, ; Spangenberg & Kulenkampff, ), Cook and Waite () use borehole logs from permafrost and deep water gas hydrate reservoirs to constrain the Archie's exponent for high‐saturation deposits. By combining compressional velocity and resistivity logs, their empirical study shows that this exponent is 2.5 ± 0.5 for high‐saturation gas hydrate reservoirs.…”
Section: Special Section Themesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fine-grained particles that are mixed with coarser sediments can be mobilized under certain conditions and are also considered a component of pore fill in some cases. (2018) On the importance of advective versus diffusive transport in controlling the distribution of methane hydrate in heterogeneous marine sediments Lei and Santamarina (2018) Laboratory strategies for hydrate formation in fine-grained sediments (also fines) You and Flemings (2018) Methane hydrate formation in thick sandstones by free gas flow Effect of gas flow rate on hydrate formation within the hydrate stability zone Meyer, Flemings, DiCarlo, You, et al (2018) Experimental investigation of gas flow and hydrate formation within the hydrate stability zone Sahoo et al (2018) Presence and consequences of coexisting methane gas with hydrate under two phase water-hydrate stability conditions Almenningen et al (2018) Upscaled anisotropic methane hydrate critical state model for turbidite hydrate-bearing sediments at East Nankai Trough Ge et al (2018) Laboratory investigation into the formation and dissociation process of gas hydrate by low-field nuclear magnetic resonance technique Role of fines Han et al (2018) Depressurization-induced fines migration in sediments containing methane hydrate: X-Ray computed tomography imaging experiments Hyodo et al (2017) Influence of fines content on the mechanical behavior of methane hydrate-bearing sediments Jang et al (2018) Impact of pore fluid chemistry on fine-grained sediment fabric and compressibility Taleb et al (2018) Hydromechanical properties of gas hydrate-bearing fine sediments from in situ testing Geomechanical and hydraulic properties Spangenberg et al (2018) A quick look method to assess the dependencies of rock physical sediment properties on the saturation with pore-filling hydrate Madhusudhan et al (2019) The effects of hydrate on the strength and stiffness of some sands Kossel et al (2018) The dependence of water permeability in quartz sand on gas hydrate saturation in the pore space Gil et al (2019) Numerical analysis of dissociation behavior at critical gas hydrate saturation using depressurization method Cook and Waite (2018) Archie's saturation exponent for natural gas hydrate in coarse-grained reservoirs Zhou et al (2018) Upscaled anisotropic methane hydrate critical state model for turbidite hydrate-bearing sediments at East Nankai Trough Coupled numerical modeling Sánchez et al (2018) Coupled numerical modeling of gas hydrate-bearing sediments: From laboratory to field-scale analyses Kim et al (2018) Methane production from marine gas hydrate deposits in Korea: Thermal-hydraulic-mechanical simulation on production wellbore stabilit...…”
Section: Introduction To a Special Sectionmentioning
confidence: 99%