The present invention claims the benefits of European Patent Application No. 15290312.6, filed on Dec. 15, 2015, titled “Apodization of Piezo-Composite Acoustic Elements,” the entire content of which is hereby incorporated by reference into the current application.
This disclosure relates to improving the quality of well log data by apodization of ultrasonic elements to remove artifacts and enable simpler approximation of excitation profiles.
This section is intended to introduce the reader to various aspects of art that may be related to various aspects of the present techniques, which are described and/or claimed below. This discussion is believed to be helpful in providing the reader with background information to facilitate a better understanding of the various aspects of the present disclosure. Accordingly, it should be understood that these statements are to be read in this light, and not as admissions.
When a well is drilled into a geological formation, logging tools are used to determine a variety of characteristics of the well as well as making detailed records of geologic formations penetrated by the well, generally known as well logging or borehole logging. Well logging is performed for the oil and gas, groundwater, mineral and geothermal exploration as well as part of environmental and geotechnical studies. Some logging tools may determine characteristics of the surrounding rock formation and some logging tools may determine when cement has been properly installed in the well to achieve zonal isolation. In the example of cement evaluation, a wellbore may be targeted to produce oil and/or gas from certain zones of the geological formation. To prevent zones from interacting with one another via the wellbore and to prevent fluids from undesired zones entering the wellbore, the wellbore may be completed by placing a cylindrical casing into the wellbore and cementing the annulus between the casing and the wall of the wellbore. During cementing, cement may be injected into the annulus formed between the cylindrical casing and the geological formation. When the cement properly sets, fluids from one zone of the geological formation may not be able to pass through the wellbore to interact with one another. This desirable condition is referred to as “zonal isolation.” Yet well completions may not go as planned. For example, the cement may not set as planned and/or the quality of the cement may be less than expected. In other cases, the cement may unexpectedly fail to set above a certain depth due to natural fissures in the formation.
A variety of acoustic tools may be used for well logging. These acoustic tools may use pulse acoustic waves (e.g., sonic or ultrasonic waves) as they are moved through the wellbore to obtain acoustic evaluation data at various depths and azimuths in the wellbore. The acoustic evaluation data may include not just the signal relating to characteristics of the well (e.g., quality of the cement), but also artifacts of the tool and other sources. For example, the generation and transmission of the ultrasonic waves may show a pattern of lobes at various directions, including a main (central) lobe and other lobes to the side of the main lobe, called side lobes. Though the energy density of side lobes is generally less than that of the main lobe, it may still produce artifacts (e.g., artifacts created by the emitted side lobes reflected back from a target, interfere with each other and the main lobe which may modify the signal properties, and the resulting signal is then erroneously displayed). Furthermore, casings are increasingly being installed using lighter cements that have acoustic properties more similar to fluids than heavier cements. These lighter cements may be difficult to detect without higher precision of the measurement. Accordingly, reducing the artifacts in ultrasonic measurements and at the same time improving computational efficiency may enable more accurate and/or precise determinations of cement installation quality as well as other characteristics of the well.
A summary of certain embodiments disclosed herein is set forth below. It should be understood that these aspects are presented merely to provide the reader with a brief summary of these certain embodiments and that these aspects are not intended to limit the scope of this disclosure. Indeed, this disclosure may encompass a variety of aspects that may not be set forth below.
Systems and methods of this disclosure reduce the generation of side lobes in an acoustic transducer. In a first example, a transducer configured to emit or receive an acoustic signal includes a front electrode, and a central layer behind the front electrode. The central layer has a substantially constant first thickness from a central point to an edge of the central layer. The central layer includes a piezo-composite body having a second thickness within the first thickness, wherein the second thickness of the piezo-composite body varies from the central point to the edge. The central layer also includes an insulating material having a third thickness, wherein the third thickness of the insulating material varies from the central point to the edge in an opposite manner to the second thickness. The first thickness is equal to the second thickness plus the third thickness. The transducer also includes a back electrode behind the central layer, having a back face coupled to a backing material. Variations in the second thickness of the piezo-composite body and the third thickness of the insulating material from the central point to the edge cause the piezo-composite body to cause reduced side lobes in comparison to a different transducer with another piezo-composite body having the disk-like geometry but a single thickness that does not vary from the central point to the edge.
In a second example, a method for making a transducer configured to reduce side lobes includes providing a central layer between a front electrode and a back electrode of the transducer, wherein the central layer has a substantially constant first thickness throughout. The central layer includes a piezo-composite body having a second thickness along an axial direction, and a width along a radial direction towards an radial edge, and an insulating material having a third thickness. The method for making a transducer configured to reduce side lobes also includes varying the second thickness of the piezo-composite body to differ in various locations along the radial direction towards the radial edge. The method for making a transducer configured to reduce side lobes further includes varying the third thickness of the insulating material such that the first thickness of the central layer comprises the third thickness of the insulating material combined with the second thickness of the piezo-composite body.
In a third example, a downhole tool includes a rotating measurement component configured to rotate to obtain measurements at a plurality of azimuthal angles in a well, wherein the rotating measurement component includes one or more transducers configured to emit acoustic signals at each of the plurality of azimuthal angles in the well and detect acoustic return waveforms that result when the emitted acoustic signals interact with the well. Each of the one or more ultrasonic transducers includes a front, and a central layer behind the front electrode. The central layer has a substantially constant thickness throughout and includes a piezo-composite body and an insulating material. Each of the one or more ultrasonic transducers also includes a back electrode behind the central layer, having a back face configured to be coupled to a backing material.
Various refinements of the features noted above may be undertaken in relation to various aspects of the present disclosure. Further features may also be incorporated in these various aspects as well. These refinements and additional features may exist individually or in any combination. For instance, various features discussed below in relation to one or more of the illustrated embodiments may be incorporated into any of the above-described aspects of the present disclosure alone or in any combination. The brief summary presented above is intended to familiarize the reader with certain aspects and contexts of embodiments of the present disclosure without limitation to the claimed subject matter.
Various aspects of this disclosure may be better understood upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the drawings in which:
One or more specific embodiments of the present disclosure will be described below. These described embodiments are examples of the presently disclosed techniques. Additionally, in an effort to provide a concise description of these embodiments, features of an actual implementation may not be described in the specification. It should be appreciated that in the development of any such actual implementation, as in any engineering or design project, numerous implementation-specific decisions may be made to achieve the developers' specific goals, such as compliance with system-related and business-related constraints, which may vary from one implementation to another. Moreover, it should be appreciated that such a development effort might be complex and time consuming, but would be a routine undertaking of design, fabrication, and manufacture for those of ordinary skill having the benefit of this disclosure.
When introducing elements of various embodiments of the present disclosure, the articles “a,” “an,” and “the” are intended to mean that there are one or more of the elements. The terms “comprising,” “including,” and “having” are intended to be inclusive and mean that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements. Additionally, it should be understood that references to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” of the present disclosure are not intended to be interpreted as excluding the existence of additional embodiments that also incorporate the recited features.
As seen in
The surface equipment 12 may carry out various well logging operations to detect conditions of the wellbore 16. The well logging operations may measure parameters of the geological formation 14 (e.g., resistivity or porosity) and/or the wellbore 16 (e.g., temperature, pressure, fluid type, or fluid flowrate). Other measurements may provide acoustic evaluation data (e.g., flexural attenuation and/or acoustic impedance) that may be used to verify the cement installation and the zonal isolation of the wellbore 16. One or more acoustic logging tools 26 may obtain some of these measurements.
The example of
The acoustic logging tool 26 may be deployed inside the wellbore 16 by the surface equipment 12, which may include a vehicle 30 and a deploying system such as a drilling rig 32. Data related to the geological formation 14 or the wellbore 16 gathered by the acoustic logging tool 26 may be transmitted to the surface, and/or stored in the acoustic logging tool 26 for later processing and analysis. As will be discussed further below, the vehicle 30 may be fitted with or may communicate with a computer and software to perform data collection and analysis.
In this way, the acoustic evaluation data 36 from the acoustic logging tool 26 may be used to determine whether cement of the annular fill 18 has been installed as expected. In some cases, the acoustic evaluation data 36 may indicate that the cement of the annular fill 18 has a generally solid character (e.g., as indicated at numeral 48) and therefore has properly set. In other cases, the acoustic evaluation data 36 may indicate the potential absence of cement or that the annular fill 18 has a generally liquid or gas character (e.g., as indicated at numeral 50), which may imply that the cement of the annular fill 18 has not properly set. For example, when the indicate the annular fill 18 has the generally liquid character as indicated at numeral 50, this may imply that the cement is either absent or was of the wrong type or consistency, and/or that fluid channels have formed in the cement of the annular fill 18. By processing the acoustic evaluation data 36 to remove noises and artifacts, ascertaining the character of the annular fill 18 may be more accurate and/or precise than comparable processing when the noises and artifacts remains in the acoustic evaluation data 36.
With this in mind,
As noted above, the acoustic evaluation data 36 may contain unwanted noise and artifacts such as side lobes in the transducer radiation pattern. Side lobes are caused by sound energy that spreads out from the transducer at angles other than the primary path. The ultrasound beam structure emitted off axis may interfere with the main contribution or itself, which leads to unwanted artifacts and is difficult to model mathematically. Shaping of the excitation profile of an ultrasonic transducer may be done by shaping the emission profile, for example by disabling certain areas of the transducer through shaping or patterning the electrodes of the ultrasonic transducer. Ideally, this structure is sub-wavelength (i.e. smaller) than the ultrasonic wavelength of interest. However, under certain conditions, the ultrasonic transducer is protected with a front face made of electrically conductive materials, whereas the conductivity of the front face rules out the use of shaped/patterned electrodes. In these cases, alternative approaches are taken to taper the transducer excitation towards the edges of the aperture in order to reduce side lobes and shape the excitation profile to better match simple mathematical models. Simpler mathematical models may be easier to implement in computing code and may save significant computational time for the data processing system 38. Accordingly, one example of the disclosure involves altering the emission profile of the transducer to shape the excitation profile. The apodized excitation profile may approximate a mathematical model (e.g., a Gaussian profile and/or any other suitable profile).
With this in mind,
To achieve the abovementioned apodization of a transducer, in one embodiment, certain areas of the transducer are disabled/attenuated. As an example,
In one embodiment, such an ultrasonic transducer includes a piezoelectric material or a piezo-composite active element including piezoelectric rods in an epoxy matrix, an epoxy insulation layer, a front electrode, a front face made of stainless steel, titanium or a gas-proof elastomer such as Chemraz® Perfluoelastomer and finally a backing material. Referring to
As set forth above, the present disclosure aims to apodize the emission and/or reception profile of piezo-composite elements used in ultrasonic transducers. This may be achieved by disabling certain areas of the piezoelectric layer through milling and refilling with epoxy or other insulating materials of low permittivities. Such an approach circumvents a potential limitation of transducers having a conductive front face, which may not allow the deposition of a certain electrode pattern. The more abrupt the change of the initial pressure profile is at the edges of the active element, the more pronounce the side lobe pattern will be. A Gaussian like pressure profile may be desirable for the aforementioned reasons. However, while a pressure profile in exact Gaussian distribution across the face of apodized transducer may eliminate side lobes, for a fixed available area (across the face of transducer), a complete Gaussian apodization means a significant beam-width reduction, which may increase beam spreading. Therefore, it is worth pointing out that there is a tradeoff in the extent of apodization, and in the present disclosure, only some apodization of the response towards the edge of the disk like transducer may be desirable without necessarily going to the extreme of a Gaussian profile. With this in mind, such designs in accordance with embodiments in the present disclosure are described in
Referring to
In one example, the thickness ti of the grooves 120 may be the same as the thickness t2 of the active piezoelectric layer 118. In another example, the thickness t1 of the grooves 120 may be thin (e.g., less than 30% of the thickness t2 of the active piezoelectric layer 118). In another example, the grooves 120 may each have a different thickness t1, and the thickness ratio t1/t2 may vary in the direction towards the edge. Furthermore, the grooves 120 that are closer to the edge may have greater thickness ratios t1/t2 than the grooves 120 that are farther away from the edge (e.g., closer towards the center of the disk-like transducer in the radial direction). The grooves 120 may also each have a different width w, and value of w may vary in the direction towards the edge. For example, the grooves 120 that are closer to the edge may have greater w values than the grooves 120 that are farther away from the edge. The above mentioned embodiments by itself or in combination thereof are aimed to apodize the emission/reception profile of piezo-composite elements to be a nearly Gaussian profile. Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
In one example, the thickness t1 of the strips 210 may be the same as the thickness t2 of the active piezoelectric layer 208. In another example, the thickness t1 of the strips 210 may be thin (e.g., less than 30% of the thickness t2 of the active piezoelectric layer 208). In another example, the strips 210 may each have a different thickness t1, and the thickness ratio t1/t2 may vary in the direction towards the edge. Furthermore, the strips 210 that are closer to the edge may have greater thickness ratios t1/t2 than the strips 210 that are farther away from the edge (e.g., closer towards the center of the disk-like transducer in the radial direction). The strips 210 may also each have a different width w, and value of w may vary in the direction towards the edge. For example, the strips 210 that are closer to the edge may have greater w values than the strips that are farther away from the edge. The above mentioned embodiments by itself or in combination thereof are aimed to apodize the emission/reception profile of piezo-composite elements to be a nearly Gaussian profile.
Referring to
The specific embodiments described above have been shown by way of example, and it should be understood that these embodiments may be susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms. It should be further understood that the claims are not intended to be limited to the particular forms disclosed, but rather to cover modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of this disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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15290312.6 | Dec 2015 | EP | regional |