scholarly journals Covariance-constrained difference inversion of time-lapse electrical resistivity tomography data

Geophysics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (5) ◽  
pp. E311-E322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Hermans ◽  
Andreas Kemna ◽  
Frédéric Nguyen

Hydrogeophysics has become a major field of research in the past two decades, and time-lapse electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) is one of the most popular techniques to monitor passive and active processes in shallow subsurface reservoirs. Time-lapse inversion schemes have been developed to refine inversion results, but they mostly still rely on a spatial regularization procedure based on the standard smoothness constraint. We have applied a covariance-based regularization operator to the time-lapse ERT inverse problem. We first evaluated the method for surface and crosshole ERT with two synthetic cases and compared the results with the smoothness-constrained inversion (SCI). These tests showed that the covariance-constrained inversion (CCI) better images the target in terms of shape and amplitude. Although more important in low-sensitivity zones, we have observed improvements everywhere in the tomograms. Those synthetic examples also show that an error made in the range or in the type of the variogram model had a limited impact on the resulting image, which still remained better than SCI. We then applied the method to cross-borehole ERT field data from a heat-tracing experiment, in which the comparison with direct measurements showed a strong improvement of the breakthrough curves retrieved from ERT. This method could be extended to the time dimension, which would allow the use of CCI in 4D inversion schemes.

2009 ◽  
Vol 7 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 475-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Cassiani ◽  
A. Godio ◽  
S. Stocco ◽  
A. Villa ◽  
R. Deiana ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Palacios ◽  
Juan José Ledo ◽  
Niklas Linde ◽  
Linda Luquot ◽  
Fabian Bellmunt ◽  
...  

Abstract. Surface electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) is a widely used tool to study seawater intrusion (SWI). It is noninvasive and offers a high spatial coverage at a low cost, but it is strongly affected by decreasing resolution with depth. We conjecture that the use of CHERT (cross-hole ERT) can partly overcome these resolution limitations since the electrodes are placed at depth, which implies that the model resolution does not decrease in the zone of interest. The objective of this study is to evaluate the CHERT for imaging the SWI and monitoring its dynamics at the Argentona site, a well-instrumented field site of a coastal alluvial aquifer located 40 km NE of Barcelona. To do so, we installed permanent electrodes around boreholes attached to the PVC pipes to perform time-lapse monitoring of the SWI on a transect perpendicular to the coastline. After two years of monitoring, we observe variability of SWI at different time scales: (1) natural seasonal variations and aquifer salinization that we attribute to long-term drought and (2) short-term fluctuations due to sea storms or flooding in the nearby stream during heavy rain events. The spatial imaging of bulk electrical conductivity allows us to explain non-trivial salinity profiles in open boreholes (step-wise profiles really reflect the presence of fresh water at depth). By comparing CHERT results with traditional in situ measurements such as electrical conductivity of water samples and bulk electrical conductivity from induction logs, we conclude that CHERT is a reliable and cost-effective imaging tool for monitoring SWI dynamics.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy C. Johnson ◽  
Jonathan N. Thomle ◽  
Judith L. Robinson ◽  
Robert D. Mackley ◽  
Michael J. Truex

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