1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to the field of well logging. More particularly, the invention relates to improved techniques in which instruments equipped with antenna systems having transverse or tilted magnetic dipoles are used for improved electromagnetic measurements of subsurface formations.
2. Background Art
Various well logging techniques are known in the field of hydrocarbon exploration and production. These techniques typically use instruments or tools equipped with sources adapted to emit energy into a subsurface formation that has been penetrated by a borehole. In this description, “instrument” and “tool” will be used interchangeably to indicate, for example, an electromagnetic instrument (or tool), a wire-line tool (or instrument), or a logging-while-drilling tool (or instrument). The emitted energy interacts with the surrounding formation to produce signals that are then detected and measured by one or more sensors. By processing the detected signal data, a profile of the formation properties is obtained.
Electromagnetic (EM) induction and propagation logging are well-known techniques. The logging instruments are disposed within a borehole to measure the electrical conductivity (or its inverse, resistivity) of earth formations surrounding the borehole. In the present description, any reference to conductivity is intended to encompass its inverse, resistivity, or vice versa. A typical electromagnetic resistivity tool comprises a transmitter antenna and one or more (typically a pair) receiver antennas disposed at a distance from the transmitter antenna along the axis of the tool (see FIG. 1).
Induction tools measure the resistivity (or conductivity) of the formation by measuring the current induced in the receiver antenna as a result of magnetic flux induced by currents flowing through the emitting (or transmitter) antenna. An EM propagation tool operates in a similar fashion but typically at higher frequencies than do induction tools for comparable antenna spacings (about 106 Hz for propagation tools as compared with about 104 Hz for the induction tools). A typical propagation tool may operate at a frequency range of 1 kHz-2 MHz.
Conventional transmitters and receivers are antennas formed from coils comprised of one or more turns of insulated conductor wire wound around a support. These antennas are typically operable as sources and/or receivers. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the same antenna may be use as a transmitter at one time and as a receiver at another. It will also be appreciated that the transmitter-receiver configurations disclosed herein are interchangeable due to the principle of reciprocity, i.e., the “transmitter” may be used as a “receiver”, and vice-versa.
A coil carrying a current (e.g., a transmitter coil) generates a magnetic field. The electromagnetic energy from the transmitter antenna is transmitted into the surrounding formation, which induces a current (eddy current) flowing in the formation around the transmitter (see FIG. 2A). The eddy current in the formation in turn generates a magnetic field that induces an electrical voltage in the receiver antennas. If a pair of spaced-apart receivers are used, the induced voltages in the two receiver antennas would have different phases and amplitudes due to geometric spreading and absorption by the surrounding formation. The phase difference (phase shift, Φ) and amplitude ratio (attenuation, A) from the two receivers can be used to derive resistivity of the formation. The detected phase shift (Φ) and attenuation (A) depend on not only the spacing between the two receivers and the distances between the transmitter and the receivers, but also the frequency of EM waves generated by the transmitter.
In conventional induction and propagation logging instruments, the transmitter and receiver antennas are mounted with their axes along the longitudinal axis of the instrument. Thus, these tools are implemented with antennas having longitudinal magnetic dipoles (LMD). An emerging technique in the field of well logging is the use of instruments including antennas having tilted or transverse coils, i.e., where the coil's axis is not parallel to the longitudinal axis of the support or borehole. These instruments are thus implemented with a transverse or tilted magnetic dipole (TMD) antenna. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that various ways are available to tilt or skew an antenna. Logging instruments equipped with TMD antennas are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,163,155, 6,147,496, 5,115,198, 4,319,191, 5,508,616, 5,757,191, 5,781,436, 6,044,325, and 6,147,496.
Drilling techniques known in the art include drilling wellbores from a selected geographic position at the earth's surface, along a selected trajectory. The trajectory may extend to other selected geographic positions at particular depths within the wellbore. These techniques are known collectively as “directional drilling” techniques. One application of directional drilling is the drilling of highly deviated (with respect to vertical), or even horizontal, wellbores within and along relatively thin hydrocarbon-bearing earth formations (called “pay zones”) over extended distances. These highly deviated wellbores are intended to greatly increase the hydrocarbon drainage from the pay zone as compared to “conventional” wellbores which “vertically” (substantially perpendicularly to the layering of the formation) penetrate the pay zone.
In highly deviated or horizontal wellbore drilling within a pay zone, it is important to maintain the trajectory of the wellbore so that it remains within a particular position in the pay zone. Directional drilling systems are well known in the art which use “mud motors” and “bent subs” as means for controlling the trajectory of a wellbore with respect to geographic references, such as magnetic north and earth's gravity (vertical). Layering of the formations, however, may be such that the pay zone does not lie along a predictable trajectory at geographic positions distant from the surface location of the wellbore. Typically the wellbore operator uses information (such as LWD logs) obtained during wellbore drilling to maintain the trajectory of the wellbore within the pay zone, and to further verify that the wellbore is, in fact, being drilled within the pay zone.
Techniques known in the art for maintaining trajectory are described for example in ribe et al., Precise Well Placement using Rotary Steerable Systems and LWD Measurement, SOCIETY OF PETROLEUM ENGINEERS, Paper 71396, Sep. 30, 2001. The technique described in this reference is based upon LWD conductivity sensor responses. If, as an example, the conductivity of the pay zone is known prior to penetration by the wellbore, and if the conductivities of overlying and underlying zones provide a significant contrast with respect to the pay zone, a measure of formation conductivity made while drilling can be used as a criterion for “steering” the wellbore to remain within the pay zone. More specifically, if the measured conductivity deviates significantly from the conductivity of the pay zone, this is an indication that the wellbore is approaching, or has even penetrated, the interface of the overlying or underlying earth formation. As an example, the conductivity of an oil-saturated sand may be significantly lower than that of a typical overlying and underlying shale. An indication that the conductivity adjacent the wellbore is increasing can be interpreted to mean that the wellbore is approaching the overlying or the underlying formation layer (shale in this example). The technique of directional drilling using a formation property measurement as a guide to trajectory adjustment is generally referred to as “geosteering.”
In addition to EM measurements, acoustic and radioactive measurements are also used as means for geosteering. Again using the example of an oil producing zone with overlying and underlying shale, natural gamma radioactivity in the pay zone is generally considerably less than the natural gamma ray activity of the shale formations above and below the pay zone. As a result, an increase in the measured natural gamma ray activity from a LWD gamma ray sensor will indicate that the wellbore is deviating from the center of the pay zone and is approaching or even penetrating either the upper or lower shale interface.
If, as in the prior examples, the conductivity and natural radioactivity of the overlying and underlying shale formations are similar to each other, the previously described geosteering techniques indicate only that the wellbore is leaving the pay zone, but do not indicate whether the wellbore is diverting out of the pay zone through the top of the zone or through the bottom of the zone. This presents a problem to the wellbore operator, who must correct the wellbore trajectory to maintain the selected position in the pay zone.
EM induction logging instruments are well suited for geosteering applications because their lateral (radial) depth of investigation into the formations surrounding the wellbore is relatively large, especially when compared to nuclear instruments. The deeper radial investigation enables induction instruments to “see” a significant lateral (or radial) distance from axis of the wellbore. In geosteering applications, this larger depth of investigation would make possible detection of approaching formation layer boundaries at greater lateral distances from the wellbore, which would provide the wellbore operator additional time to make any necessary trajectory corrections. However, conventional propagation-type instruments are capable of resolving axial and lateral (radial) variations in conductivity of the formations surrounding the instrument, but the response of these instruments generally cannot resolve azimuthal variations in the conductivity of the formations surrounding the instrument.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,181,138 and 5,892,460 describe the use of TMD antennas to provide directional sensitivity related to bed boundaries. U.S. Pat. No. 5,892,460 proposes using propagation measurements and off-centered antennas from the tool axis for directional measurements. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,781,436, 5,999,883, and 6,044,325 describe methods for producing estimates of various formation parameters from tri-axial measurements. Disadvantages of these techniques include the coupled effects of dip and formation anisotropy on the resulting measurements.
It is desirable to have measurement techniques that eliminate adverse characteristics of measurements with TMD antennas in geosteering, well placement, directional drilling, or horizontal well drilling applications. It is also desirable to have systems and processes that are insensitive to dip and anisotropy for the estimation of bed boundary parameters.
The invention provides various methods for determining a property of a subsurface formation traversed by a borehole. The methods comprise disposing a logging instrument having a longitudinal axis and equipped with multiple antennas within the borehole, a first transmitter antenna having its magnetic moment oriented in a first direction with respect to the instrument axis, a first receiver antenna having its magnetic moment oriented in said first direction with respect to the instrument axis, a second transmitter antenna having its magnetic moment oriented in a second direction with respect to the instrument axis, a second receiver antenna having its magnetic moment oriented in said second direction with respect to the instrument axis; activating the first transmitter antenna to transmit electromagnetic energy; measuring a signal associated with the transmitted energy at the second receiver antenna; deactivating the first transmitter antenna; activating the second transmitter antenna to transmit electromagnetic energy; measuring a signal associated with the transmitted energy at the first receiver antenna; and calculating the difference between the measured signals to determine the formation property.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description and the appended claims.
Basic properties of the cross-dipole measurement. For a transmitter carrying a current I, the voltage V measured at the receiver can be expressed in terms of a tensor transfer impedance {right arrow over({right arrow over (Z)})}RT:
The transmitter antenna has a magnetic dipole moment oriented along the unit vector uT; the receiver antenna is oriented along uR. The transfer impedance {right arrow over({right arrow over (Z)})}RT has the following symmetry property
where the superscript T denotes the transpose tensor.
Two sets of orthogonal unit vectors are introduced, ux, uy, uz, for the formation, and uX, uY, uZ, for the tool coordinates, with uZ along the axis of symmetry of the tool. The z axis is perpendicular to the layers, oriented upward. The tool axis is in the x-z plane. The dip angle is denoted by α, so that
uX=ux cos α+uz sin α,
uY=uy,
uZ=−ux sin α+uz cos α. (3)
The symmetrized cross-dipole measurement in the tool coordinates can be transformed to formation coordinates as follows:
We get the same result in the tool coordinates as in the formation coordinates.
The voltage difference Vzx−Vxz in the formation coordinates can be computed from:
Here AR and AT represent the area of receiver and transmitter respectively. Here Z0=√{square root over (μ0/ε0)}=376.7 ohms is the impedance of free space, k is the free-space propagation coefficient, and H1(1) is a Hankel function of the first kind of order one. The distance between the receiver and transmitter antennas, projected horizontally, is
The path of integration C must lie above the origin and below the singularities of γh.
The transfer impedance {right arrow over({right arrow over (Z)})}RT is expressed in terms of two scalar Green's functions γe and γh. These scalar Green's functions are solutions of the following ordinary differential equations (ODEs):
The ε and μ in these equations denote the relative permitivity and permeability
The subscripts h and u indicate horizontal and vertical components. Variability of the magnetic permeability μ is not interesting for this application; we will assume that the magnetic permeability is isotropic, μz=μ⊥, and constant. Because γh is independent of εz, and Vzx−Vxz couples only to γh, it follows that Vzx−Vxz is independent of the vertical components of conductivity σz and permitivity εz.
The Green's function γh can be constructed from solutions of a homogeneous one-dimensional ODE:
Let ψh− a solution that is regular at z=−∞ and ψh+ a solution that is regular at z=+∞. From these solutions, one can construct Green's functions by Lagrange's method. The Green's function γh can be expressed as
where z<=min (z,z′), and z>=max (z,z′). The Wronskian Wh, defined by
is independent of z. Equation (10) shows that the Green's functions γh is symmetric
γh(zR,zT)=γh(zT,zR). (15)
Born Approximation. An approximate method of solving Equation (10) can be obtained by first constructing γh for a uniform background medium (subscript B):
Equation (10) is replaced by
which can be solved iteratively. The first iteration is called the Born approximation
γBornh(z,z′)=γBh(z,z′)−k2∫γBh(z,z″)[ε⊥(z″)−(ε⊥)B]γBh(z″,z′)dz″. (19)
The Born approximation is accurate for low frequency, low conductivity, or low conductivity contrast. This iterative solution method cannot be applied to γe because Equation (9) does not have the required smoothness properties. The Born approximation is not valid for γe, nor for general tri-axial measurements.
By substituting Equation (19) in Equation (7), we obtain
The homogeneous medium terms cancel out. For the case where zT<zR,, the Born kernel KBorn is given by
To simplify the contour integral, we used
Response in a uniform layer. In a uniform layer, Vzx−Vxz can be evaluated analytically. Suppose that the electrical parameters ε⊥, μ⊥ are independent of z in an interval zL<zT<zR<zH. The solutions ψ−, ψ+, from Equation (12), have the form
choosing the branch of the square root that makes real (β)≧0. Equation (13) gives
This expression depends only on the sum of the vertical positions of the receiver and transmitter coils zR+zT. Generally, the magnitude of reflection coefficients is smaller than unity. The exponential factor in the denominator provides further attenuation since real (β)≧0. Thus one can expect that, in a thick layer,
|R−R+e−2β(z
The expression in Equation (27) is then the sum of two contributions proportional to the reflection coefficients from the lower and upper boundaries. This gives a simple formula for interpreting the measurement in a thick uniform layer:
The measurement depends weakly on the antenna separation and dip angle through the distance ρ.
Response at large distance from boundary. As seen in Equation (29), the effect of the upper and lower boundaries can be studied separately. Here we study the effect of the lower boundary. We assume that R+=0 or zH→∞,
A simple approximation can be obtained if
k2|ε⊥μ⊥|(ρ2+(zR+zT−2zL)2)>>1. (31)
The Hankel function is replaced by its asymptotic expansion:
The stationary phase method is applied to the integral in Equation (30). The main contribution to the integral comes from the point qs where
using the phase function
φ(q)=iqρ−βh(q)(zR+zT−2zL). (33)
The position of the saddle point is
qs=k√{square root over (ε⊥μ⊥)}ρ[ρ2+(zR+zT−2zL)2]−1/2. (34)
The reflection coefficient, evaluated at qs, is pulled out of the integration
The integral is proportional to the field produced by an image transmitter at
zI=2zL−zT. (36)
Again we use the integral representation
with
D=[ρ2+(zR−zI)2]1/2, (38)
to get the approximate formula
Reflection from a uniform half-space. A simple formula for the reflection coefficient R− is obtained if the medium is uniform below z=zL. We use the subscript L for the electromagnetic parameters of the region
z<zL. For the solution ψ−, we must have
ψ−=A−(eβz+R−e−β(z−2z
ψ−=eβ
At the boundary z=zL, ψ− and
must be continuous, giving
By solving these equations, we find
where
β(q)=√{square root over (q2−ε⊥μ⊥k2)}, βL(q)=√{square root over (q2−(ε⊥μ⊥)Lk2)}. (43)
In Equation (39), R− must be evaluated at q=qs where
qs=k√{square root over (ε⊥μ⊥)}ρ[ρ2+(zR−zI)2]−1/2. (44)
Equation (42) may be rewritten as
The leading term is proportional to (ε⊥)L−ε⊥, as expected from the Born approximation, Equation (20).
Alternative implementation. Other antenna orientations may be used to obtain the same information. In
The directions of the dipole moments of the coils, represented by unit vectors u1, u2, can be expressed, in the tool coordinates, as
u1=uX sin θ1+uZ cos θ1,
u2=uX sin θ2+uZ cos θ2. (46)
Therefore
Other variations are readily apparent. In
A simple extension of alternative measurement is for the antenna pair with θ2=180°−θ1, as illustrated in FIG. 5. It is a two-step measurement: data are acquired in a “primary” tool position, when the magnetic dipoles of the transmitter and receiver are directed towards the upper boundary, and in the position when the tool is rotated 180° about its axis from the primary position, when the dipoles are oriented towards the lower boundary. Basically, the measurement is taken when the field, i.e., the dipoles, are in the bedding plane. The dipole moment of transmitter T is tilted at an angle θ1 from the tool axis; and receiver R is tilted at angle θ2. First, transmitter T is turned on, and the voltage, Vup, on receiver R, is recorded. Second, tool is rotated for 180°, transmitter T is turned on, and the voltage, Vdown, on receiver R, is recorded. The difference voltage, Vup−Vdown, is used to obtain information about adjacent bed boundaries.
Propagation-type measurements. Cross-dipole coupling (XZ) is the principal measurement providing the directional up/down sensitivity. In the LWD environment, propagation style measurements are typically used, since they are relatively easy to build. With a propagation tool, XZ propagation measurements do not have directionality. Directional information is obtained with tilted antennas (at least one transmitter and/or receiver antenna tilted) and uses the difference between the tool response when it is looking up and the tool response when it is looking down. These “up-down” differential responses produce simple responses to bed boundaries. Both induction and propagation style directional measurements are sensitive to anisotropy at certain dip angles (e.g., α≠90° and α≠0°). This sensitivity can easily be confused with the response of the tool to a nearby bed.
The present invention relates to directional measurements that are insensitive to anisotropy of the formation at a wide range of dip angles and over a wide frequency range. Some embodiments of the invention are based on anti-symmetrized antenna configurations or systems. “Anti-symmetry” or “anti-symmetric” as used herein refers to a configuration in which sets of transmitter-receiver arrangements are provided in opposite orientations along the tool axis, and these sets can be correlated with a standard symmetry operation (e.g., translation, mirror plane, inversion, and rotation) with respect to a point on the tool axis or a symmetry plane perpendicular to the tool axis.
According to embodiments of the invention, the logging tools may be adapted to measure the ratio or difference between the tool response when it is “looking” up and the tool response when it is “looking” down. These “up-down” differential responses produce simple responses to bed boundaries similar to the crossed-dipole measurements obtained with induction-type measurements.
Implementing a directional measurement with up/down sensitivity using a propagation type tool relies on the use of tilted antennas, because in phase shift or attenuation, directionality information is lost if the transmitter and receiver antenna axes are mutually perpendicular and the transmitter or receiver axis is aligned with the tool axis.
The equivalent configuration to that shown in
Embodiments of the invention use an anti-symmetric transmitter-receiver arrangement to remove the dip dependence. Two tool configurations insensitive to anisotropy at any dip are shown in FIG. 8. These configurations correspond to
Knowing the process to derive these measurements, the equivalent configurations producing similar results are shown in FIG. 11. Using the configuration of
If we look at the phase shift and attenuation from the configuration in
where Attenuation is measured in dB and Phase Shift is measured in degrees.
For a tool at an angle of 90° to the bedding (horizontal tool), the voltage ratio measured when T1 is energized is:
while the voltage ratio measured when T2 is energized is:
Taking the difference of the log ratios gives:
Now the directionality of the measurement is in the cross terms and VXZ=−VZX. If we are not too close to the boundaries then the cross terms will be much less than the direct coupling and we can approximate:
Thus the measurements of this propagation tool will approximate the measurements made by an ideal directional induction tool.
The general rule for directional propagation measurement is: Let M(θT, θR1, θR2) be a propagation measurement with tilted antenna, where θT is the transmitter tilt and θR1 and θR2 are tilts of two receiver antennas. If M*(θT, θR1, θR2)is the measurement with transmitter and receivers switched, (i.e., M* is the mirror image of M with respect to the central plane perpendicular to the tool axis, with all antenna orientations preserved) then
(M(θT, θR1, θR2)−M*(θT, θR1, θR2)) UP−(M(θT, θR1, θR2)−M*(θT, θR1, θR2)) DOWN (54)
is not sensitive to anisotropy at any dip and is only sensitive to boundaries (subscripts UP and DOWN denote measurements when the tool is oriented up or down, with all dipoles in the plane perpendicular to the bedding.
This concept is useful when the base measurement M(θT, θR1, θR2) performs well in horizontal wells. The concept also includes tools with all antennas tilted, including transverse antennas.
An alternative to the two-receiver embodiment of the invention relies on depth shifting, which complicates its use for geosteering.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.
This invention claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/325,272 filed on Sep. 26, 2001 and U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/325,273 filed on Sep. 26, 2001.
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