Microfracture detection for CO2 storage by using the spectral element method and the linear slip model

Author(s):  
Roman Ponomarenko ◽  
Denis Sabitov ◽  
Marwan Charara
Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-69
Author(s):  
Jiaqi Xu ◽  
Qing Huo Liu ◽  
Hengshan Hu ◽  
Yang Zhong

We use the spectral element method (SEM) to simulate 3D acoustic wavefields in the fluid-filled borehole embedded in the fractured media. The fractures are characterized by the linear-slip model (LSM), which is incorporated into the surface integral of the SEM weak form, avoiding meshing individual fractures, thus reducing the degrees of freedom of the fractures comparing with meshing each fracture directly. For the fracture-free case, we validate SEM through the comparison with the real-axis integration (RAI) method for both monopole and dipole sources. For the case with a fracture, we compare the SEM-LSM solutions with the reference numerical solutions of a thin layer model using finite-difference method. Good agreement is achieved between the results from the proposed method and the reference finite-difference solutions. We find that the acoustic wavefields excited by a dipole source are more sensitive to the fractures than those by a monopole source. To show the ability of the approach to handle complex problems, we simulate the cases with a tilted fracture and multiple fractures. Based on the simulated results, we investigate the influence of the fracture parameters (e.g., stiffness, tilt angle, azimuth, thickness, number and spatial intervals of fractures) on the scattered wavefields. We find that the tilt angle has an obvious influence on the scattered waveforms and amplitudes. The results also demonstrate that the wavefields are quite sensitive to the number of fractures. The magnitudes of the horizontal-components transmitted wavefields decrease linearly with the number of the fractures. Through analyzing the synthetic data in time and frequency domains, we discuss how to evaluate the properties of fractures intersected by a borehole.


2020 ◽  
Vol 223 (3) ◽  
pp. 1794-1804
Author(s):  
R Ponomarenko ◽  
D Sabitov ◽  
M Charara

SUMMARY Simulation of seismic wave propagation through fracture has a wide range of applications in environmental sciences. In this paper, we propose an efficient tool to compute accurate seismic response from a fracture within a reasonable time frame. Its theoretical formulation is based on the spectral element method (SEM) and extended to Schoenberg’s linear slip model (LSM). SEM is very effective in terms of accuracy and stability criteria. LSM is treated as a boundary condition and perfectly fits for modelling fractures with a small aperture. The method is implemented for 3-D heterogeneous media on GPU, which allows calculating the tasks with large and complex geometries. The validation of the numerical method shows good agreement with the theory. Finally, we applied the method to the task that illustrates the possibility of the proposed solution to handle real problems. We model sonic logging for a well with a microfracture in a cement sheath. Based on synthetic seismograms, strong connections between wave mode parameters and the fracture parameters were established. This task is of high importance for carbon capture and storage, as microfractures provide the path for long-term CO2 migration.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitriy Konovalov ◽  
Anatoly Vershinin ◽  
Konstantin Zingerman ◽  
Vladimir Levin

Modern high-performance computing systems allow us to explore and implement new technologies and mathematical modeling algorithms into industrial software systems of engineering analysis. For a long time the finite element method (FEM) was considered as the basic approach to mathematical simulation of elasticity theory problems; it provided the problems solution within an engineering error. However, modern high-tech equipment allows us to implement design solutions with a high enough accuracy, which requires more sophisticated approaches within the mathematical simulation of elasticity problems in industrial packages of engineering analysis. One of such approaches is the spectral element method (SEM). The implementation of SEM in a CAE system for the solution of elasticity problems is considered. An important feature of the proposed variant of SEM implementation is a support of hybrid curvilinear meshes. The main advantages of SEM over the FEM are discussed. The shape functions for different classes of spectral elements are written. Some results of computations are given for model problems that have analytical solutions. The results show the better accuracy of SEM in comparison with FEM for the same meshes.


2013 ◽  
Vol 86 ◽  
pp. 210-227 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christoph Bosshard ◽  
Abdelouahab Dehbi ◽  
Michel Deville ◽  
Emmanuel Leriche ◽  
Riccardo Puragliesi ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. 1-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Cerrato ◽  
Luis Rodríguez-Tembleque ◽  
José A. González ◽  
M.H. Ferri Aliabadi

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