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Abstract
Over the last five years, the acquisition of rotary sidewall cores has become increasingly important in the O&G business. It is a matter of fact that the current tendency is to prefer them as a replacement to bottom hole cores, essentially for rig time related cost saving. This fact leads to force their use also for those types of characterisation usually reserved to larger size samples so, by consequence, some specific issues associated to their small size and to the lack of knowledge of in situ orientation have to be faced. For several applications such as geomechanics (whose experimental analysis require vertical plugs), petrophysics (permeability anisotropy, natural fracture orientation) and sedimentology, the original orientation, or its a posteriori identification, is mandatory in order to correctly measure properties relevant for reservoir management and studies. The full orientation of rotary sidewall cores requires to acquire or compute three couples of spatial information: high-side and low-side, wellbore end and formation end, trend and plunge of the samples. A dedicated workflow to a posteriori reconstruction of the orientation of large size rotary sidewall cores has been developed by means of the integration of multiple scale imaging techniques: images from logs and sidewall core are integrated through commercial software usually adopted for dip analysis. This approach has been successfully applied to several sidewall cores gathered in different geological environments. Currently, new coring and conveyance technologies allowing a predetermined sidewall cores orientation are emerging, increasing the reliability of the orientation workflow. Therefore, different scenarios of log planning strategy, operational solutions and post-coring analysis can be expected, depending on the confidence in the geological-structural interpretation and on the complexity of the technical environment. In all cases, it is extremely important to plan specific data acquisition and handling operations from wellsite to laboratory; including formalized minimum requirements and dedicated procedures, in order to maximize the quality of the subsequent laboratory analyses.
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