The present invention relates to methods and systems for detecting a stream of bubbles emanating from a bubble source into a body of sea water.
A method for detecting hydrocarbon seepages into the sea is described in US patent application publication No. 2014/0256055. The method starts with performing a remote sensing survey and analysing the remote sensing data from the remote sensing survey to determine the location of hydrocarbon seeps into the sea. The remote sensing survey may include performing one or more of ocean acoustic waveguide survey; water column seismic survey; active acoustic sensing survey; imagery and spectrometry of slicks and atmospheric gas plumes; passive acoustic sensing survey; magnetic and gravity surveys; optical sensing survey and thermal anomalies detection survey. These surveys include seismic and acoustic imaging of seeps in the water column, performed in ship-based marine vessels, using multibeam echo sounder and/or side-scan sonar.
There is a need to improve on these surveys.
In a first aspect, there is provided a method of detecting a stream of bubbles emanating from a bubble source into a body of sea water below a sea surface and above a sea floor, comprising:
In a second aspect, there is provided a system for detecting a stream of bubbles emanating from a bubble source into a body of sea water, comprising:
The appended drawing, which is non-limiting, comprises the following figures:
The figures are schematic in nature, and not to scale. Like reference numbers are used for like features.
The invention will be further illustrated hereinafter by way of example only, and with reference to the non-limiting drawing. The person skilled in the art will readily understand that, while the invention is illustrated making reference to one or more a specific combinations of features and measures, many of those features and measures are functionally independent from other features and measures such that they can be equally or similarly applied independently in other embodiments or combinations.
A method and system are presently proposed, wherein a transmitter array of acoustic waves as well as a receiver array for acoustic waves is deployed at a depth within the SOFAR channel in the body of sea water. Contributions to the receiver signals originating from acoustic waves that have reflected off of a stream of bubbles traversing the SOFAR channel are identified and isolated from the receiver signals.
In this context, the term “bubbles” is used for vapour filled bubbles as well as liquid droplets. The bubbles may or may not be at least partially frozen. In case of hydrocarbon containing bubbles, the bubbles may at least partially be in the form of hydrocarbon hydrates, such as methane hydrates.
Advantages of deploying the transmitter array as well as the receiver array within the SOFAR channel may include:
These advantages contribute to the ability of long-range detection (>5 km, preferably >25 km) of bubble streams emanating from seeps, such as seeps originating from natural hydrocarbon sources from the sea floor, or seeps from under-water infrastructure confining hydrocarbons such as pipelines. The method and system may be useful not only for exploration purposes, but also for surveillance around off-shore hydrocarbon drilling and production facilities. The ability of said long-range detection within the SOFAR channel does not negate the possibility of the method and system also providing for detection at shorter ranges, even down to tens of meters and/or into the near field regime, in or outside the SOFAR channel.
Where it exists, the SOFAR channel is centred on the depth at which the speed of sound reaches a minimum relative to its values above and below in the water column.
Without wishing to be bound by a particular theory of origin, it is currently believed that a cumulative effect of temperature gradient (thermocline) and water pressure gradient (pycnocline), and, to a lesser extent, salinity gradient (halocline), combines to create a layer of minimum sound speed in the water. Falling temperature with depth causes a decrease in sound speed, a negative sound speed gradient. Increasing pressure with depth causes an increase in sound speed, or a positive sound speed gradient. The depth where the sound speed depth-gradient is zero (i e a minimum in the sound speed) is referred to herein as the “SOFAR plane”. The SOFAR plane is not necessarily a flat plane at a fixed depth, but it can fluctuate both in time as well as laterally. Acoustic waves can propagate long distances within the SOFAR channel, confined within the SOFAR channel by an acoustic wave guiding effect, with relatively little attenuation.
In insufficiently deep water, there might not exist a SOFAR channel, for instance if the pressure increase at the sea floor is insufficient to offset the thermocline. While this also provides a wave guiding effect for sound waves, this is less preferred as such waveguide would be located directly adjacent to sea floor. As a result, reflections of guided waves come with relatively high reflections from the sea floor. Accordingly, it is preferred that the body of water be sufficiently deep for the SOFAR channel to exist and be sufficiently removed from the sea floor to avoid sea floor reflections that may mask comparatively weak reflections from bubbles traversing the SOFAR channel. The SOFAR plane is preferably at least 400 m, more preferably at least 600 m, distant from the sea floor in any of the geographical locations under investigation, to keep contributions to the received signals from bottom-reflections to an acceptable limit.
Acoustic wave guiding conditions may also exist within a mixed water layer at the top of the water column under the influence of combined actions of wind and waves. However, also surface reflections may mask signal from a bubble stream and thus this mechanism of acoustic wave guiding is typically less preferred than wave guiding in the SOFAR channel. The SOFAR plane is preferably at least 300 m, preferably at least 400 m, distant from the sea surface. In addition, any bubble stream that has emerged from a seep at a depth is less likely to have dissolved than near the surface. Dissolution tends to be accelerated near the surface.
It has been found that frequencies of between 0.8 kHz and 10 kHz provide the best results in terms of a combination of detection range and echo strength from bubble streams.
The SOFAR channel 9 is formed by a water layer extending over two lateral directions (x,y) and having a thickness direction (z) perpendicular to the two lateral directions in each lateral location. A SOFAR plane 10 is defined in the body of sea water 1, as a continuous two-dimensional sheet below the sea surface 2, spanning over a range of geographical locations in the body of sea water 1, wherein the depth-gradient of the acoustic velocity is zero and the acoustic velocity of the outgoing acoustic waves is lower than in any other depth. The SOFAR plane 10 is fully embedded within the SOFAR channel 9. In
An active array 20 is deployed within the SOFAR channel. In the embodiment of
As illustrated in
The outgoing acoustic waves are preferentially emitted in a radiation pattern that is predominantly directed within the SOFAR channel 9 and preferably along the SOFAR plane 10. This is schematically illustrated in
The radiation pattern in broadside view may for instance have a half-power angular beam-width of no more than 5°, meaning in some embodiments that a majority of acoustic power is emitted along the SOFAR plane 10 within 2.5° on either side of the SOFAR plane 10. Half-power angular beam width is generally defined as an angular segment including the angle of maximum transmission wherein an acoustic power is between the half-power points (i.e. between 0 and −3 dB) from the acoustic power at the angle of maximum transmission. The outgoing acoustic waves may be actively steered away from broadside direction, using known beam forming techniques. These make use of manipulated phase differences across mutually adjacent transducers within the transmitter array 21.
Similar beam width and deployment considerations apply to the receiver array 22, to directionally selectively receive reflected acoustic waves propagating primarily within the SOFAR channel 9 along a path reciprocal to that of the emitted outgoing acoustic waves. The directional selectivity may be directed away from broadside, by applying similar beam forming techniques on the transducers in the receiver array 22. As with the transmitter array, it is preferred to choose a relatively large receiver array aperture RA. The receiver array aperture RA can be, but is not necessarily, equal to the transmitter array aperture SA.
In practice, the transmitter array 21 or the receiver array 22, or both the transmitter array 21 and the receiver array 22, each extend over an aperture of at least 10 wavelengths, preferably at least 16 wavelengths, of the emitted outgoing acoustic waves. Suitably, the wavelength of the center frequency of the acoustic emission spectrum is taken as reference. For this purpose, the center frequency is defined as the geometric average of the −3 dB frequencies (half-power frequencies) of the main lobe in the acoustic emission spectrum.
Emitted outgoing acoustic waves which are guided within the SOFAR channel 9 may reflect off regions within the SOFAR channel 9 that have a different acoustic impedance. This can include a stream of bubbles 8 that traverses the SOFAR channel 9. The reflected acoustic waves from all reflectors are received with the receiver array and transduced to receiver signals representative of those received acoustic waves. Receiver signals that correlated with the transmitted acoustic waves are retained. If a stream of bubbles 8 traverses the SOFAR channel 9, the receiver signals will also contain contributions of those acoustic waves that have been reflected off of the stream of bubbles. These contributions are selected from the receiver signals. This can be done in a variety of ways taking advantage of the specific properties of the bubble stream.
For instance, the spectral response of the reflected signals can be used to identify whether the reflected acoustic wave can be attributed to a stream of bubbles. Modelling and previous investigations have shown that bubble streams nurtured by methane-containing seepages in the sea form elongate approximately cylindrical plumes that have have a typical lateral diameter in the range of meters (e.g. between 5 and 10 m) while extending over hundreds of meters in longitudinal direction along the plume. The plume is not necessarily aligned with the vertical, but it can deviate while approximately preserving its typical diameter. The combined system of such a plume in the sea water is prone to have vibrational modes that are unique to such shapes.
Other properties can be used in addition, or instead, thereof to identify and isolate those portions of the receiver signals that represent reflections from the stream of bubbles. For instance, a stream of bubble is not expected to move in lateral directions in the same way as other potential reflecting bodies or assemblages, and therefore target persistence is another way to select signal contributions from bubble streams.
The method is expected to work best when the SOFAR plane extends at depths where stable hydrates form upon contact of methane with the sea water. Such hydrates tend to form a shell or a partial shell around each bubble, as a result of which the bubbles will have higher resistance against dissolution. As a rule of thumb, this means that it is most preferred when the SOFAR channel is at least 600 m distant from the sea surface. Modelling has shown that stable methane hydrates in the world's seas are generally most likely to exist below 600 m and not above 400 m depth. Empirical formulas published by Dickens and Quinby-Hunt (Geophysical Research Letters Vol. 21(19), pp. 2115-2118, 1994) for the depth dependence of methane hydrate stability in seawater as a function of temperature, or temperature and salinity as published by Tishchenko et al (Chemical Geology Vol. 219(1-4), pp. 37-52, 2005), were used with the decadal annual mean profiles of temperature and salinity to estimate the water column depths at which methane hydrate is likely to exist in the areas of interest. In cases considered by Applicant, hydrate stability was found to end at the depth where the seawater temperature is between approximately 7.0 and 7.3° C. This was found to correspond to typical depths of between 600 m and 620 m below sea surface.
The depth of the SOFAR plane can be determined using data from for instance the World Ocean Atlas, issued by the U.S. National Oceanographic Data Center.
Referring again to
One-way transmission loss has been estimated by computing complex pressure along ray paths over a range of 50 km for launch angles within ±60° of horizontal at 1° increments. For this the acoustic transmitter array was assumed to be located at the SOFAR plane in a range-independent environment. The calculations were done with coherent ray-tracing runs (for instance Lei Dong and Hefeng Dong in “Bellhop—A modeling approach to Sound propagation in the ocean”, published in in 37th Scandinavian Symposium on Physical Acoustics, February 2014). The water column was modeled as a vertically stratified medium described by the decadal annual depth profile of sound speed, a frequency-dependent acoustic absorption profile, and water density at the sea floor. The sea floor was modeled as a homogeneous half-space of very fine sand/silt (mean grain size about 4 phi). Compressional and shear wave speeds and attenuations in the sediment were computed with empirical relationships of sound speed and attenuation ratios vs. mean grain size derived from high-frequency (>10 kHz) sea floor acoustics (as described in e.g. pages 313-314 of Jackson & Richardson, “High-Frequency Seafloor Acoustics”, Springer, 2007).
The results of the calculations confirm that rays within a few degrees of horizontal travel down the SOFAR channel. Rays launched above the SOFAR plane are refracted downward due to the strong sound speed gradient. As a result, only the steepest rays reach the sea surface and are attenuated on subsequent bounces between the bottom and the sea surface. Therefore, the sea surface is not expected to affect long-range transmission loss along the SOFAR channel. Rays launched below the SOFAR plane are refracted upward because of a positive sound speed gradient. The steepest rays are reflected on the bottom, turn upward and are refracted downward before they reach the sea surface.
To first approximation, the transmission loss can be modeled with a straight forward spreading and absorption loss formula along the SOFAR plane (represented by the dashed lines 32 and 34 in
TL(r)=20 log10(sd)+10 log10(r/sd)+α(f,sd);
wherein TL stands for transmission loss (in dB) and r is the lateral range measured from the transmitter array (in meters), sd is the transmitter depth (in meters), and a an acoustic absorption coefficient (in dB/m), which depends on frequency f, and temperature, salinity, pressure, and pH at the transmitter depth sd.
It should be understood that
Generally, the transducers in the transmitter array and the receiver array may be capable of both transmitting and receiving. However, the transducers used in the transmitter array may be selected from the group of transmitters that are generally unsuitable for receiving. Likewise, the transducers used in the receiver array may be selected from the group of receivers that are generally unsuitable for transmitting. The receiver array may consist of discrete transducers, such as geophones or hydrophones, or of a continuous distributed transducer which can be divided into “receiver channels”. An example is distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) by fiber optics. Various DAS cables with broadside acoustic sensitivity, which would be an advantageous property for the presently proposed methods and systems, have been proposed and described in for instance: U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,091,589; 9,494,461; 9,322,702; and US patent application publication No. 2015/0260567. A preferred option is a DAS cable having one or more helically-wound optical fibers, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 9,494,461.
The person skilled in the art will understand that the present invention can be carried out in many various ways without departing from the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/461,604, filed Feb. 21, 2017, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2018/018593 | 2/19/2018 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62461604 | Feb 2017 | US |