Image Logs Worth Hundred Applications: Industry’s First Innovative High-Resolution Dual-Imager Logging-while-Drilling Technology Overcomes Barriers of Oil-base-Mud

Author(s):  
C. Shrivastava ◽  
C. Maeso ◽  
V. Wibowo
Author(s):  
Matthew Blyth ◽  
◽  
Naoki Sakiyama ◽  
Hiroshi Hori ◽  
Hiroaki Yamamoto ◽  
...  

A new logging-while-drilling (LWD) acoustic tool has been developed with novel ultrasonic pitch-catch and pulse-echo technologies. The tool enables both high-resolution slowness and reflectivity images, which cannot be addressed with conventional acoustic logging. Measuring formation elastic-wave properties in complex, finely layered formations is routinely attempted with sonic tools that measure slowness over a receiver array with a length of 2 ft or more depending upon the tool design. These apertures lead to processing results with similar vertical resolutions, obscuring the true slowness of any layering occurring at a finer scale. If any of these layers present significantly different elastic-wave properties than the surrounding rock, then they can play a major role in both wellbore stability and hydraulic fracturing but can be absent from geomechanical models built on routine sonic measurements. Conventional sonic tools operate in the 0.1- to 20-kHz frequency range and can deliver slowness information with approximately 1 ft or more depth of investigation. This is sufficient to investigate the far-field slowness values but makes it very challenging to evaluate the near-wellbore region where tectonic stress redistribution causes pronounced azimuthal slowness variation. This stress-induced slowness variation is important because it is also a key driver of wellbore geomechanics. Moreover, in the presence of highly laminated formations, there can be a significant azimuthal variation of slowness due to layering that is often beyond the resolution of conventional sonic tools due to their operating frequency. Finally, in horizontal wells, multiple layer slownesses are being measured simultaneously because of the depth of investigation of conventional sonic tools. This can cause significant interpretational challenges. To address these challenges, an entirely new design approach was needed. The novel pitch-catch technology operates over a wide frequency range centered at 250 kHz and contains an array of receivers having a 2-in. receiver aperture. The use of dual ultrasonic technology allows the measurement of high-resolution slowness data azimuthally as well as reflectivity and caliper images. The new LWD tool was run in both vertical and horizontal wells and directly compared with both wireline sonic and imaging tools. The inch-scale slownesses obtained show characteristic features that clearly correlate to the formation lithology and structure indicated by the images. These features are completely absent from the conventional sonic data due to its comparatively lower vertical resolution. Slowness images from the tool reflect the formation elastic-wave properties at a fine scale and show dips and lithological variations that are complementary to the data from the pulse-echo images. The physics of the measurement are discussed, along with its ability to measure near-wellbore slowness, elastic-wave properties, and stress variations. Additionally, the effect of the stress-induced, near-wellbore features seen in the slowness images and the pulse-echo images is discussed with the wireline dipole shear anisotropy processing.


2012 ◽  
Vol 198-199 ◽  
pp. 1246-1249
Author(s):  
Sheng Hu Liu ◽  
Ya Min Xing

This electronic Logging while drilling (LWD) is a new sort of well drilling technology developed in recent years. As to the traditional cable borehole survey, the LWD method has many advantages because of its higher accuracy, higher geologic strata resolution capacity, much less time and cost. To meet the current logging technology needs, A data acquisition and processing system for logging while drilling is designed.It minutely introduces the collection system structure, acquisition Program, the digital design of LWD and discusses the design and the implementation of each functional module.The system which designed on the basis of the high precise DSP and FPGA implements signal pretreatment, high speed A/D control and digitalization of the phase sensitive demodulation etc, optimizes the acquisition and processing system and supplies a new way for the development of logging while drilling.Experimental results show that system performance has attained the design requirement.


1990 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 300
Author(s):  
B. D. Lake ◽  
V. Santostefano

Future development drilling in Bass Strait will be challenged by small field sizes, thin oil columns and increasing drilling difficulty due to greater hole angle and reach. New drilling technology successfully introduced in the recent Bream, Whiting, Perch and Dolphin developments including Steerable Drilling Systems (SDS), Polycrystalline Diamond Compact (PDC) bits and Logging While Drilling (LWD) tools, coupled with the successful use of jackup rigs for miniplatform development, has given Esso the tools and confidence to meet the development challenges of the 'nineties. Bass Strait's first horizontal well has been successfully drilled and completed with further wells planned in the current Bream development. There still remain some areas requiring improvements, including hole cleaning in high angle holes. Improvements in this and other areas will further improve drilling capability.Given the right incentives Bass Strait drilling technology is well positioned for the challenge of oil development in the 'nineties.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Peter Deri ◽  
Ana Gabriela Peternell Carballo ◽  
John Hebert ◽  
James L. Fisher ◽  
Rudy B. Gibbs ◽  
...  

Geophysics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. D217-D230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Thiel ◽  
Dzevat Omeragic

Deep-directional electromagnetic (EM) logging-while-drilling technology can map reservoir boundaries and fluid contacts for strategic geosteering, reservoir navigation, and more recently, for reservoir characterization. The inversion-based resistivity mapping is used to make real-time geosteering decisions and to refine and update the reservoir model during and after drilling. Traditional 1D and 2D inversion approaches ignore the lateral changes of the reservoir, which are contained in the azimuthally sensitive measurements and only provide a longitudinal 2D representation of the 3D reservoir structure around the well. A new 2D lateral imaging inversion uses the full azimuthal sensitivity of the measurements to map the vertical and lateral resistivity heterogeneities around the wellbore. A 2.5D EM solver is run in a Gauss-Newton optimization to reconstruct the measurements in complex scenarios and determine the 2D anisotropic resistivity distribution in an imaging plane along with the orientation of the formation invariant direction with respect to the wellbore. Continuous 2D imaging along the well path generates a 3D reservoir resistivity map in the proximity of the wellbore.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document