Seismic characterization of thin beds containing patchy carbon dioxide-brine distributions: A study based on numerical simulations

Geophysics ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 76 (3) ◽  
pp. R57-R67 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Germán Rubino ◽  
Danilo R. Velis

We studied the seismic attenuation and velocity dispersion effects produced by wave-induced fluid flow in weakly consolidated sandstones containing patchy carbon dioxide [Formula: see text]-brine distributions. The analysis also focuses on the velocity pushdown because of the presence of this gas, as well as on the role of the wave-induced fluid flow (mesoscopic) effects on the amplitude variation with angle (AVA) seismic response of thin layers containing [Formula: see text], such as those found at the Utsira Sand, Sleipner field, offshore Norway. We found that this loss mechanism may play a key role on conventional surface seismic data, suggesting that further data analysis may provide useful information on the characteristics of the fluid distributions in these environments. Numerical experiments let us observe that although mesoscopic effects can be very significant in this kind of media, the seismic response of a given isolated thin layer computed considering such effects is very similar to that of a homogeneous elastic thin layer with a compressional velocity equal to that of the original porous rock averaged in the effective data bandwidth. This suggests that the thin-bed prestack spectral inversion method published by the authors could be used to estimate representative compressional velocities and layer thicknesses in these environments. In effect, results using realistic synthetic prestack seismic data show that isolated [Formula: see text]-bearing thin beds can be characterized in terms of their thicknesses and representative compressional velocities. This information can be qualitatively related to [Formula: see text] saturations and volumes; thus, the prestack spectral inversion method could find application in the monitoring of the evolution of [Formula: see text] plumes at injection sites similar to that at the Sleipner field.

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. T89-T102
Author(s):  
David Mora ◽  
John Castagna ◽  
Ramses Meza ◽  
Shumin Chen ◽  
Renqi Jiang

The Daqing field, located in the Songliao Basin in northeastern China, is the largest oil field in China. Most production in the Daqing field comes from seismically thin sand bodies with thicknesses between 1 and 15 m. Thus, it is not usually possible to resolve Daqing reservoirs using only conventional seismic data. We have evaluated the effectiveness of seismic multiattribute analysis of bandwidth extended data in resolving and making inferences about these thin layers. Multiattribute analysis uses statistical methods or neural networks to find relationships between well data and seismic attributes to predict some physical property of the earth. This multiattribute analysis was applied separately to conventional seismic data and seismic data that were spectrally broadened using sparse-layer inversion because this inversion method usually increases the vertical resolution of the seismic. Porosity volumes were generated using target porosity logs and conventional seismic attributes, and isofrequency volumes were obtained by spectral decomposition. The resulting resolution, statistical significance, and accuracy in the determination of layer properties were higher for the predictions made using the spectrally broadened volume.


Geophysics ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 75A147-75A164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tobias M. Müller ◽  
Boris Gurevich ◽  
Maxim Lebedev

One major cause of elastic wave attenuation in heterogeneous porous media is wave-induced flow of the pore fluid between heterogeneities of various scales. It is believed that for frequencies below [Formula: see text], the most important cause is the wave-induced flow between mesoscopic inhomogeneities, which are large compared with the typical individual pore size but small compared to the wavelength. Various laboratory experiments in some natural porous materials provide evidence for the presence of centimeter-scale mesoscopic heterogeneities. Laboratory and field measurements of seismic attenuation in fluid-saturated rocks provide indications of the role of the wave-induced flow. Signatures of wave-induced flow include the frequency and saturation dependence of P-wave attenuation and its associated velocity dispersion, frequency-dependent shear-wave splitting, and attenuation anisotropy. During the last four decades, numerous models for attenuation and velocity dispersion from wave-induced flow have been developed with varying degrees of rigor and complexity. These models can be categorized roughly into three groups ac-cording to their underlying theoretical framework. The first group of models is based on Biot’s theory of poroelasticity. The second group is based on elastodynamic theory where local fluid flow is incorporated through an additional hydrodynamic equation. Another group of models is derived using the theory of viscoelasticity. Though all models predict attenuation and velocity dispersion typical for a relaxation process, there exist differences that can be related to the type of disorder (periodic, random, space dimension) and to the way the local flow is incorporated. The differences manifest themselves in different asymptotic scaling laws for attenuation and in different expressions for characteristic frequencies. In recent years, some theoretical models of wave-induced fluid flow have been validated numerically, using finite-difference, finite-element, and reflectivity algorithms applied to Biot’s equations of poroelasticity. Application of theoretical models to real seismic data requires further studies using broadband laboratory and field measurements of attenuation and dispersion for different rocks as well as development of more robust methods for estimating dissipation attributes from field data.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 186-195
Author(s):  
Mikhail A. Novikov ◽  
Vadim V. Lisitsa

In our work we investigate the effect of transport and elastic properties anisotropy on seismic attenuation due to fracture-to-fracture wave-induced fluid flow using numerical algorithm of estimation of seismic wave attenuation in anisotropic fractured porous fluid-saturated media. Algorithm is based on numerical solution of anisotropic Biot equations using finite-difference scheme on staggered grid. We perform a set of numerical experiments to model wave propagation in fractured media with anisotropic fractured-filling material providing wave-induced fluid flow within interconnected fractures. Recorded signals are used for numerical estimation of inverse quality factor. Results demonstrate the effect of fracture-filling material anisotropy on seismic wave attenuation.


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