None.
Disclosed embodiments relate generally to downhole electromagnetic logging and more particularly to a method and apparatus for making fully gain compensated deep propagation measurements, such as phase shift and attenuation measurements, using both tilted and orthogonal antennas.
The use of electromagnetic measurements in prior art downhole applications, such as logging while drilling (LWD) and wireline logging applications is well known. Such techniques may be utilized to determine a subterranean formation resistivity, which, along with formation porosity measurements, is often used to indicate the presence of hydrocarbons in the formation. Moreover, azimuthally sensitive directional resistivity measurements are commonly employed e.g., in pay-zone steering applications, to provide information upon which steering decisions may be made.
Downhole electromagnetic measurements are commonly inverted at the surface using a formation model to obtain various formation parameters, for example, including vertical resistivity, horizontal resistivity, distance to a remote bed, resistivity of the remote bed, dip angle, and the like. One challenge in utilizing directional electromagnetic resistivity measurements, is obtaining a sufficient quantity of data to perform a reliable inversion. The actual formation structure is frequently significantly more complex than the formation models used in the inversion. The use of a three-dimensional matrix of propagation measurements may enable a full three-dimensional measurement of the formation properties to be obtained as well as improve formation imaging and electromagnetic look ahead measurements. Tilted antennas may be used to reduce the number of required electromagnetic measurements to acquire a three-dimensional measurement of the formation properties. However, there are no known methods for providing fully gain compensated three-dimensional measurements using tilted antennas.
A method for making downhole electromagnetic logging while drilling measurements is disclosed. An electromagnetic logging while drilling tool is rotated in a subterranean wellbore. The logging tool includes first and second transmitters and a receiver axially spaced apart from one another. The receiver includes an axial receiving antenna and first and second transverse receiving antennas. The first transmitter includes a tilted antenna and the second transmitter includes a tilted antenna and first and second transverse transmitting antennas. The first and second transverse transmitting antennas are rotationally offset by a predefined angle from the first and second transverse receiving antennas. A projection of the tilted antenna in the first transmitter on a cross-axial plane is rotationally offset by an arbitrary angle from the first transverse receiving antenna. Electromagnetic voltage measurements are made at the receiver while the tilted transmitting antenna in the first transmitter fires during tool rotation. The electromagnetic voltage measurements are mathematically rotated through at least the arbitrary angle to obtain rotated measurements, selected ratios of which are processing to compute gain compensated measurement quantities.
The disclosed embodiments may enable a three-dimensional tensor of gain compensated deep electromagnetic measurements to be acquired using tilted antennas. Moreover, certain of these measurements tend to be insensitive to the tilt angle and tilt angle variations in the tilted antennas.
This summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts that are further described below in the detailed description. This summary is not intended to identify key or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in limiting the scope of the claimed subject matter.
For a more complete understanding of the disclosed subject matter, and advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
It will be understood that the deployment illustrated on
It will be further understood that the disclosed embodiments are not limited to use with a semisubmersible platform 12 as illustrated on
As is known to those of ordinary skill in the art, an axial antenna is one whose moment is substantially parallel with the longitudinal axis of the tool. Axial antennas are commonly wound about the circumference of the logging tool such that the plane of the antenna is substantially orthogonal to the tool axis. A transverse antenna is one whose moment is substantially perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the tool. A transverse antenna may include, for example, a saddle coil (e.g., as disclosed in U.S. Patent Publications 2011/0074427 and 2011/0238312 each of which is incorporated by reference herein). A tilted antenna is one whose moment is angularly offset (tilted) with respect to the tool axis and is neither parallel with nor orthogonal to the tool axis.
It will be understood that the offset angle α is not necessarily 45 degrees as depicted on
In
As is known to those of ordinary skill in the art, a time varying electric current (an alternating current) in a transmitting antenna produces a corresponding time varying magnetic field in the local environment (e.g., the tool collar and the formation). The magnetic field in turn induces electrical currents (eddy currents) in the conductive formation. These eddy currents further produce secondary magnetic fields which may produce a voltage response in a receiving antenna. The measured voltage in the receiving antennas can be processed, as is known to those of ordinary skill in the art, to obtain one or more properties of the formation.
In general the earth is anisotropic such that its electrical properties may be expressed as a three-dimensional tensor which contains information on formation resistivity anisotropy, dip, bed boundaries and other aspects of formation geometry. It will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that the mutual couplings between tri-axial transmitter antennas and tri-axial receiver antennas depicted form a three-dimensional matrix and thus may have sensitivity to a full three-dimensional formation impedance tensor. For example, a three-dimensional matrix of measured voltages V may be expressed as follows:
where Vij represent the three-dimensional matrix of measured voltages, with i indicating the corresponding transmitter and j indicating the corresponding receiver, Ii represent the transmitter currents, and Zij represent the transfer impedances (couplings) which depend on the electrical and magnetic properties of the environment surrounding the antenna pair in addition to the frequency, geometry, and spacing of the antennas. The third and fourth subscripts indicate the axial orientation of the transmitter and receiver antennas. For example, ZTRXZ represents a cross-coupling impedance when a z-axis antenna of receiver R receives an electromagnetic wave from an x-axis antenna of transmitter T.
It will be understood that while it may be desirable to measure the full voltage tensor shown in Equation 1, such measurements are not always feasible or practical. Tilted antennas are commonly used in applications where it is desirable to make fewer voltage measurements yet still obtain as many tensor impedance components as possible.
With reference to
V
ij
=G
i
m
i
t
R
θ
t
Z
ij
R
θ
m
j
G
j (2)
where Zij are matrices representing triaxial tensor couplings (impedances) between the locations of transmitter i and receiver j, Gi and Gj are diagonal matrices representing the transmitter and receiver gains, Rθ represents the rotation matrix about the z-axis through angle θ, mi and mj represent the matrices of the direction cosines for the transmitter and receiver moments at θ=0, and the superscript t represents the transpose of the corresponding matrix. The matrices in Equation 2 may be given, for example, as follows:
With respect to the measurement tool configuration shown on
where I represents the identity matrix, and α, β1, β2, and y are defined above with respect to
R
θ
t
Z
ij
R
θ
=Z
DC
_
ij
+Z
FHC
_
Ij cos(θ)+ZFHS_ij sin(θ)+ZSHC_ij cos(2θ)+ZSHS_ij sin(2θ) (8)
where ZDC_ij represents a DC (average) coupling coefficient, ZFHC_ij and ZFHS_ij represent first order harmonic cosine and first order harmonic sine coefficients (referred to herein as first harmonic cosine and first harmonic sine coefficients), and ZSHC_ij and ZSHS_ij represent second order harmonic cosine and second order harmonic sine coefficients (referred to herein as second harmonic cosine and second harmonic sine coefficients) of the couplings. These coefficients are shown below:
As stated above, the receiver antenna voltages are measured at 124 while the tool rotates at 122 (
V
ij
=V
DC
_
ij
+V
FHC
_
ij cos(θ)+VFHS_ij sin(θ)+VSHC_ij cos(θ)2θ)+VSHS_ij sin(2θ) (10)
In one disclosed embodiment gain compensation may be accomplished by obtaining ratios between the x and y receiver gains and the x and y transmitter gains (e.g., at 128 in
These voltage measurements may be expressed as a function of the couplings (impedances), gains, and the angle α, for example, as follows:
Taking the ratio between the DC xx and yy voltage measurements yields:
Likewise, taking the ratio between the DC voltage xy and yx measurements yields:
where gRx and gRy represent the gains of the x and y antenna on receiver R and gTC1x and gTC1y represent the gains of the x and y antenna on transmitter Tc1. Equations 13 and 14 may be combined to obtain measured quantities that are equivalent to a gain ratio of the x and y receiver and a gain ratio of the x and y transmitter, for example, as follows:
Since the gain ratio formula in Equation 15 involves taking a square root, there may be a 180 degree phase ambiguity (i.e., a sign ambiguity). As such, the gain ratios may not be arbitrary, but should be controlled such that they are less than 180 degrees. For un-tuned receiving antennas, the electronic and antenna gain/phase mismatch (assuming the antenna wires are not flipped from one receiver to another) may generally be controlled to within about 30 degrees (particularly at the lower frequencies used for deep measurements). This is well within 180 degrees (even at elevated temperatures where the mismatch may be at its greatest). For tuned transmitting antennas, however, the phase may change signs (i.e., jump by 180 degrees) if the drift in the antenna tuning moves across the tuning resonance. Such transmitter phase ratio ambiguity (sign ambiguity) may be resolved, for example, using Equations 15 and 16 and the knowledge that the receiver gain/phase ratio is not arbitrary, but limited to about 30 degrees (i.e. to enable the determination of whether the transmitter phase difference is closer to 0 or 180 degrees).
The x and y gain ratios defined in Equation 15 enable the following gain ratio matrices to be defined (e.g., at 128 in
where GR_ratio represents the gain ratio matrix for the receiver R. A similar ratio may be obtained for the transmitter Tc1 if so desired.
Applying this gain ratio to the measured voltage harmonics enables the y receiver gains to be replaced by x receiver gains (e.g., at 130 in
VDC_TR_grVDC_TRGR_ratio (17)
where VDC_TR_gr represent the DC voltage coefficients between the tilted transmitter T and the triaxial receiver R with the applied gain ratio.
From Equation 17, the DC couplings VDC_TRx_gr, VDC_TRy_gr, and VDC_TRz_gr may be expressed, for example, as follows:
Note that the x- and y-axis receiver measurements are dependent on the misalignment angle γ. Couplings related to the xx+yy and the xy-yx couplings may be obtained by mathematically rotating the x- and y-axis receiver measurements (e.g., at 132 in
where XXpIusYY represents a quantity proportional to the xx coupling plus the yy coupling and XYminusY X represents a quantity proportional to the xy coupling minus the yx coupling. A quantity proportional to the zz coupling may also be defined, for example, as follows: ZZ=VDC
The gain ratio may be similarly applied to the first harmonic cosine coefficients and the first harmonic sine coefficients, for example, as follows:
VFHC_TR_grVFHC_TRGR_ratio
V
FHS
_
TR
_
gr
VFHS_TRGR_ratio (20)
where VFHC_TR_gr and VFHS_TR_gr represent the first harmonic cosine voltage coefficients and the first harmonic sine coefficients between the tilted transmitter T and the triaxial receiver R with the applied gain ratio and where:
V
FHC
_
TRx
_
gr
=g
T
g
Rxcos (β1)ZTRzxc
V
FHC
_
TRy
_
gr
=g
T
g
Rxcos(β1)ZTRzy
V
FHC
_
TRz
=g
T
g
Rzsin(β1) (ZTRxzcos(γ)+ZTRyzsin(γ)) (21)
and
V
FHS
_
TRx
_
gr
=g
T
g
Rxcos(β1)ZTRzy
V
FHS
_
TRy
_
gr
=−g
T
g
Rxcos(β1)ZTRzx
V
FHS
_
TRz
=g
T
g
Rzsin(β1)(ZTRyzcos(γ)−ZTRxzsin(γ)) (22)
Note that the z-axis receiver measurements are dependent on the misalignment angle γ. Selected first harmonic cosine and first harmonic sine measurements from Equations 20 and 21 may be combined to obtain zx, zy, xz, and yz couplings. The zx and zy couplings may be obtained, for example, as follows:
where ZX and ZY represent the quantities proportional to the zx and zy couplings. Quantities related to the xz and yz couplings may be obtained by mathematically rotating the measurements (e.g., at 132 in
XZ
V
FHC
_
TRzcos(γm)−VFHS_TRzsin(γm)=gTgRzsin(β1)ZTRxz
YZ
V
FHC
_
TRzsin(γm)+VFHS_TRzcos(γm)=gTgRzsin(β1)ZTRyz (24)
where XZ and YZ represent the xz and yz couplings and ym represents the measured misalignment angle.
The gain ratio may be similarly applied to the second harmonic cosine coefficients and the second harmonic sine coefficients, for example, as follows:
VSHC_TR_grVSHC_TRGR_ratio
VSHS_TR_grVSHS_TRGR_ratio (24)
where VSHC_TR_gr and VSHS_TR_gr represent the second harmonic cosine voltage coefficients and the second harmonic sine coefficients between the tilted transmitter T and the triaxial receiver R with the applied gain ratio and where:
Note that the x- and y-axis receiver measurements are dependent on the misalignment angle γ. The second harmonic z- axis receiver measurements are equal to zero. Couplings related to the xx-yy and the xy+yx couplings may be obtained by mathematically rotating the x- and y-axis receiver measurements (e.g., at 132 in
where XXminusYY represents a quantity proportional to the xx coupling minus the yy coupling and XYpIusYX represents a quantity proportional to the xy coupling plus the yx coupling.
Selected ones of the above described quantities (e.g., in Equations 17-27) may be combined to obtain various gain compensated measurements quantities. For example, quantities that are equivalent to the zx, zy, xz, and yz couplings may be obtained as follows:
where CZX, CZY, CXZ, and CYZ represent the gain compensated zx, zy, xz, and yz couplings. Since each of these quantities is a function of the transmitter tilt angle β1, it may be advantageous to include the tilt angle as an input parameter in the forward modeling.
Also note that the zx and zy couplings make use of different normalization than the xz and yz couplings (ZTRXX+ZTRyy vs. ZTRZZ). Hence, symmetrized and anti-symmetrized combinations have not been formed (e.g., following U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,969,994 and 7,536,261).
Gain compensated quantities equivalent to xy+yx, xy-yx, and xx-yy couplings may also be obtained, for example, as follows:
where CXYpIusYX, CXYminusYX, and CXXminusYY represent the gain compensated xy+yx, xy-yx, and xx-yy couplings.
A gain compensated quantity equivalent to the ratio of the xx to yy couplings may also be obtained, for example, as follows:
where CXXdivYY represents the gain compensated quantity equivalent to the ratio of the xx to yy couplings.
A gain compensated quantity may also be formed by combining the DC coefficients obtained using the both the tilted transmitter T and the tilted transmitter Tc2, for example, as follows:
where CUHR represents the gain compensated quantity. Equations 30 and 31 advantageously provide fully gain compensated quantities (CXXdivYY and CUHR) similar to the uncompensated resistivity anisotropy and resistivity harmonic quantities disclosed U.S. Patent Publication 2011/0238312. The CUHR quantity is both fully gain compensated and tends to be less sensitive to variations in the tilt angle of the antennas (especially when β1=β2) as compared to the prior art resistivity harmonic quantity.
A phase shift and attenuation may be computed for the compensated quantities listed above. Quantities related to the xx, yy, and zz couplings are generally never zero and thus the phase shift and attenuation may be computed, for example, as follows:
where PS represents the phase shift, AT represents attenuation, and CQ represents the compensated quantity (e.g., one of the quantities computed in Equations 30 and 31). Compensated quantities related to the cross terms (e.g., the xy, yx, xz, zx, yz, and zy couplings) may sometimes be equal to zero in simple formations (e.g., homogeneous formations not having boundary layers). For these quantities (e.g., those listed in Equations 28 and 29), the phase shift and attenuation may be computed by adding one to CQ, for example, as follows:
It will be understood that the various methods disclosed herein for obtaining fully gain compensated electromagnetic measurement quantities may be implemented on a on a downhole processor. By downhole processor it is meant an electronic processor (e.g., a microprocessor or digital controller) deployed in the drill string (e.g., in the electromagnetic logging tool or elsewhere in the BHA). In such embodiments, the fully compensated measurement quantities may be stored in downhole memory and/or transmitted to the surface while drilling via known telemetry techniques (e.g., mud pulse telemetry or wired drill pipe). Alternatively, the harmonic fitting coefficients may be transmitted uphole and the compensated quantities may be computed at the surface using a surface processor. Whether transmitted to the surface or computed at the surface, the quantity may be utilized in an inversion process (along with a formation model) to obtain various formation parameters as described above.
Although deep reading electromagnetic logging while drilling tools have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alternations can be made herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure as defined by the appended claims.