Integration of Open Hole Full Wave Stoneley and the Cased Hole Noise Log Data: A Novel Approach for Near Well Bore Seal Integrity Analysis and Natural Subsurface Fluid Flows

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. N. Acharya ◽  
G. Joshi ◽  
A. Al-Mershed ◽  
F. Al-Otaibi ◽  
Mejbel Al-Azmi ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bo Zhang ◽  
Hongyu Zhang ◽  
Pablo Moscato

<div>Complex software intensive systems, especially distributed systems, generate logs for troubleshooting. The logs are text messages recording system events, which can help engineers determine the system's runtime status. This paper proposes a novel approach named ADR (stands for Anomaly Detection by workflow Relations) that employs matrix nullspace to mine numerical relations from log data. The mined relations can be used for both offline and online anomaly detection and facilitate fault diagnosis. We have evaluated ADR on log data collected from two distributed systems, HDFS (Hadoop Distributed File System) and BGL (IBM Blue Gene/L supercomputers system). ADR successfully mined 87 and 669 numerical relations from the logs and used them to detect anomalies with high precision and recall. For online anomaly detection, ADR employs PSO (Particle Swarm Optimization) to find the optimal sliding windows' size and achieves fast anomaly detection.</div><div>The experimental results confirm that ADR is effective for both offline and online anomaly detection. </div>


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 14-17
Author(s):  
Andreas Weller ◽  
Sepehr Sangin ◽  
Günter Buntebarth ◽  
George Melikadze

The project uses results of temperature measurements in shallow boreholes to determine the geothermal gradients for a selected set of wells in Georgia. The hydrothermal flow in the Caucasus region driven by ongoing tectonic activities causes a varying temperature field that impedes determination of stable temperature gradients. Conventional temperature logging provides only a snapshot of the temperature distribution in a well. Therefore, the methodology adopted in this study is based on continuous stationary measurements with up to eight temperature sensors fixed at different depths in the wells. Temperature measurements have been performed in 14 wells using thermometers with resolving power of 0.01 K. The temperature field was recorded during periods ranging from 16 hours to 4 days. This practice of measurements enabled detection of thermal effects of fluid flows within the selected set of boreholes. Considering the 14 wells that were selected for this study, eight showed signs of stability in temperature increase versus depth and the remaining seven wells revealed signs of instability due subsurface fluid flows.


Geophysics ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hilton B. Evans

Logging service companies are attempting to provide a fairly good selection of devices which have proven to be popular with the oil industry. However, the introduction of new devices or new services is being limited because oil companies are standardizing the logging‐suites run in their various geographic operating areas. Some of these new techniques appear to have significant applications. Recently, standard logging‐suites and evaluation‐techniques have evolved; these can be evaluated in terms of open‐hole and cased‐hole applications and the physical parameters of interest. Generally, these standard procedures depend on the differences in responses of multiple electrical and porosity devices. The multiple measurements are input to response equations which yield the parameters of interest. Although mining companies have been slow to adopt logging techniques, the use of logging devices and interpretation methods in nonpetroleum mineral (groundwater, nonmetals, metallic sulfides, etc.) exploration and evaluation, and in providing geophysical survey parameters is increasing. Nuclear, electrical, acoustic, and other methods are utilized, and newer applications of these to exploration, particularly in lithology determination, suggest themselves. Log digitizing and computer processing of log data have become routine in most major oil companies, but techniques, programs, and equipment vary significantly. Currently, commercial digitizing services are too expensive to be used extensively; the per‐log costs, however, are declining as more digitizing companies offer competitive services. Two basic commercial systems for transmission and computation of log data are functioning. To date, these systems yield “quicklook” reconnaissance parameter computations. Current research and development emphasis is on pulsed neutron‐spectroscopy and acoustic‐parameter measurements and on digital processing techniques.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valeriy Dobrinyn ◽  
Andrey Gorodnov ◽  
Valery Nikolaevich Chernoglazov
Keyword(s):  

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