Amplitude Variation with Offset Responses Modeling Study of Walkaway Vertical Seismic Profile Data at CO2 Geological Storage Site, Ketzin, Germany

2011 ◽  
Vol 85 (5) ◽  
pp. 1118-1126
Author(s):  
Can YANG ◽  
Sayed Hesammoddin KAZEMEINI ◽  
Wenfang FAN ◽  
Christopher JUHLIN ◽  
Dameng LIU
Geophysics ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 77 (6) ◽  
pp. B295-B306 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Duxbury ◽  
Don White ◽  
Claire Samson ◽  
Stephen A. Hall ◽  
James Wookey ◽  
...  

Cap rock integrity is an essential characteristic of any reservoir to be used for long-term [Formula: see text] storage. Seismic AVOA (amplitude variation with offset and azimuth) techniques have been applied to map HTI anisotropy near the cap rock of the Weyburn field in southeast Saskatchewan, Canada, with the purpose of identifying potential fracture zones that may compromise seal integrity. This analysis, supported by modeling, observes the top of the regional seal (Watrous Formation) to have low levels of HTI anisotropy, whereas the reservoir cap rock (composite Midale Evaporite and Ratcliffe Beds) contains isolated areas of high intensity anisotropy, which may be fracture-related. Properties of the fracture fill and hydraulic conductivity within the inferred fracture zones are not constrained using this technique. The predominant orientations of the observed anisotropy are parallel and normal to the direction of maximum horizontal stress (northeast–southwest) and agree closely with previous fracture studies on core samples from the reservoir. Anisotropy anomalies are observed to correlate spatially with salt dissolution structures in the cap rock and overlying horizons as interpreted from 3D seismic cross sections.


Geophysics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. S135-S150
Author(s):  
Jakob B. U. Haldorsen ◽  
Leif Jahren

We have determined how the measured polarization and traveltime for P- and S-waves can be used directly with vertical seismic profile data for estimating the salt exit points in a salt-proximity survey. As with interferometry, the processes described use only local velocities. For the data analyzed in this paper, our procedures have confirmed the location, inferred from surface-seismic data, of the flank of a steeply dipping salt body near the well. This has provided us more confidence in the estimated reservoir extent moving toward the salt face, which in turn has added critical information for the economic evaluation of a possible new well into the reservoir. We also have found that ray-based vector migration, based on the assumptions of locally plane wavefronts and locally plane formation interfaces, can be used to create 3D reflection images of steeply dipping sediments near the well, again using only local velocities. Our local reflection images have helped confirm the dips of the sediments between the well and the salt flank. Because all parameters used in these processes are local and can be extracted from the data themselves, the processes can be considered to be self-sufficient.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. SW57-SW62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yunsong Huang ◽  
Ruiqing He ◽  
Chaiwoot Boonyasiriwat ◽  
Yi Luo ◽  
Gerard Schuster

We introduce the concept of seminatural migration of multiples in vertical seismic profile (VSP) data, denoted as specular interferometric migration, in which part of the kernel is computed by ray tracing and the other part is obtained from the data. It has the advantage over standard migration of ghost reflections, in that the well statics are eliminated and the migration image is no more sensitive to velocity errors than migration of VSP primaries. Moreover, the VSP ghost image has significantly more subsurface illumination than the VSP primary image. The synthetic and field data results validate the effectiveness of this method.


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