The present invention relates to a method of analyzing vertical seismic profile data, and to a method of producing a mineral hydrocarbon containing fluid from an earth formation.
In an article published in 2000 by the Society of Exploration Geophysicists in the Proceedings of the 9th International Workshop on Seismic Anisotropy (9IWSA), pages 339-348, entitled “Estimation of local anisotropy using polarizations and travel times from the Oseberg 3D VSP”, Williamson and Maocec apply polarization inversion to direct P-wave arrivals from a 3D vertical seismic profiling (VSP) data set in a multi-offset VSP experiment to yield the anisotropic seismic velocity in the vicinity of a receiver array located in a well in the earth. The receiver array consisted of five elements, each comprised of three perpendicular geophones of which one was oriented along the well. For each shot used to build the 3D VSP, the slowness along the well was obtained by a linear regression of the travel times over the five receiver elements.
Carrying out the inversion required information on seismic velocity. In order to execute the polarization inversion, Williamson and Maocec decided to simply fix the ratio VS0/VP0=0.5, whereby VS0 corresponds to the vertical shear wave (S-wave) velocity and VP0 corresponds to the vertical pressure wave (P-wave) velocity.
While the value of 0.5 for the ratio VS0/VP0 may be realistic, Williamson and Maocec note that an error in the ratio would generate a similar proportional error in the anisotropy parameters used for fitting the polarizations.
Embodiments of the present invention seek to eliminate that drawback.
The invention provides a method of analyzing a vertical seismic profile, comprising:
By absorbing information of shear wave velocity in some of the free parameters together with one or more anisotropy parameters that characterize formation anisotropy, no information on shear wave velocity needs be provided to find values for the regression parameters. In other words, the inversion becomes independent of the shear wave velocity. Hence, the inversion provides more robust and accurate regression values than before.
The regression values of the free parameters may be utilized in their own right. In one embodiment, for instance, they are shown to correlate with lithology. The regression values of the free parameters may also be utilized for calculating values for the one or more anisotropy parameters, by inserting the information of shear wave velocity.
The invention also provides a computer readable medium storing computer-executable instructions performing at least the following steps:
The method and/or the computer readable medium may be utilized in a method of producing a mineral hydrocarbon fluid from an earth formation, wherein the regression values that have resulted from analyzing the vertical seismic profile in accordance with the above may be correlated with the presence and/or nature of a mineral hydrocarbon containing fluid reservoir. The method may further comprise drilling a wellbore to and into the reservoir and/or producing the mineral hydrocarbon containing fluid from the reservoir via a well that penetrates into the reservoir.
The invention will hereinafter be explained by way of example and with reference to the drawings.
In the drawings:
One or more illustrative embodiments incorporating the invention disclosed herein are presented below.
The term “slowness” is conventionally employed as entity describing local travel time differences per distance between receivers located at different locations in the earth over the distance that the receivers are separated from each other. However, for the purpose of interpreting the present application, the term slowness is intended to cover also derived quantities, including for instance its inverse equivalent, local velocity.
The term “slowness-polarization data” as used herein is intended to mean data containing information that links slowness to wave polarization direction.
The present invention utilizes a multi-offset vertical seismic profiling data set. Such multi-offset VSP data set may be obtained by means of a so-called 2D walk-away method, optionally combined with a walk-around method, or a 3D method employing an areal array of multiple sources, etc.
In the present example, the borehole will be assumed to extend along a reference direction.
A source has fired in location 5 with an offset D relative to the point where the borehole intersects the surface. The location 5 of source may be but does not have to be on the surface. The firing induces a traveling wave front 7, here schematically depicted at various times t after the firing. The local slowness q at a selected receiver is dt/dh, whereby dt represents the difference in P-wave arrival times, suitably of first arrivals, in the selected receiver and an adjacent receiver.
The wave fronts, at the locations of the receivers 3, in addition to their propagation velocity and their direction vector n, also have a polarization vector U, each of which may be characterized in the three-dimensional space relative to the reference direction along the borehole 1 by means of a polar angle ψ (which will hereinafter be used to represent the angle between the polarization vector and the reference direction) and of an azimuthal angle φ (which will hereinafter be used to represent an azimuthal direction of the polarization vector around and the reference direction).
Both the slowness and the polarization direction U; are local quantities—on a scale on the order of a seismic wavelength—that don't depend on the velocity structure of the overburden.
One of the objects of this disclosure is to select a function relating P-wave polarization angle to P-wave slowness. To obtain such a function, Applicants contemplated the use of a first-order perturbation theory to derive the function for triclinic media as well as for higher symmetries.
A reference isotropic solid was selected of which the density-normalized elasticity may be described by a density-normalized stiffness tensor cijkl:
wherein Vp and Vs are the P- and S-wave velocities and δij represents the Kronecker delta. Anisotropy of the earth is characterized using anisotropic perturbations Δcijkl from the isotropic stiffness tensor cijkl of the earth formation, whereby it is assumed that the norm of Δcijkl is much smaller than the norm of cijkl.
Ignoring higher order terms of Δcijkl, it can be shown that the slowness vector components pm (m=1, 2, 3) can be expressed in terms of components of the perturbed P-wave polarization vector U as follows:
wherein f=1(1−(Vs/Vp)2).
This equation was unexpectedly discovered by combining G. E. Backus' work as published in J. Geophysical Research Vol. 70 (1965) pages 3429-3439 under title “Possible form of seismic anisotropy of the uppermost mantle under oceans” with I. P{hacek over (s)}en{hacek over (c)}ik and D. Gajewski's work as published in Geophysics Vol. 63 (1998) under title “Polarization, phase velocity, and NMO velocity of qP-waves in arbitrary weakly anisotropic media”, both herein incorporated by reference.
Taking m=3 as the direction along the reference to direction, p3 is by definition the slowness q. The three components of polarization vector U=[U1, U2, U3], in terms of polar angle ψ and azimuth angle φ component, also taking 3 as the direction along the reference direction, are: U1=sin ψ cos φ; U2=sin ψ sin φ; U3=cos ψ. These components may be inserted in the equation for suitably applying the equation to the VSP data set.
Fifteen combinations of 21 stiffness coefficients can be constrained by applying the equation to wide azimuth multi-offset VSP data, provided there is enough slowness-polarization data of sufficiently low noise to do so. The combinations (in Voigt notation) are:
The equation also indicates that Vp can be resolved along with these combinations, but that the value of f, which in itself cannot be inferred from the slowness-polarization data, is necessary to correctly constrain the values Of Δcijkl.
It is therefore presently proposed to define a new parameterization, which absorbs information of seismic velocity (e.g. in terms of f) together with one or more of the anisotropy parameters Δcijkl that characterize formation anisotropy. Thus, the new function is defined in terms of natural parameters, which govern the anisotropic dependence of the P-wave slowness on polarization, rather than in parameters that are typically used for describing the anisotropy. When inverting on basis of the new function, regression values can more effectively be obtained without requiring a-priory knowledge of or an assumption of seismic velocities.
Generally, the stiffness perturbations may suitably be transferred to other parameter sets that more suitably map with certain features characterizing an anisotropy. Moreover, while selecting the function relating P-wave polarization angle to P-wave slowness, any suitable assumption on symmetry of the anisotropy in the earth formation may be made in order to reduce the number of free parameters and/or the data requirements. Each symmetry may give rise to a parameterization suitable for characterizing anisotropy under that symmetry.
For instance, an orthorhombic medium, whose symmetry plane x1-x2 is orthogonal to the reference direction, may be assumed. Instead of the stiffness perturbations Δcijkl, the anisotropy may more suitably be expressed in terms of five anisotropic coefficients δ(1), δ(2), η(1), η(2), and η(3), in accordance with I. Tsvankin “Anisotropic parameters and P-wave velocity for orthorhombic media”, in Geophysics Vol. 62 (1997), pages 1292-1309 and/or V. Grechka and I. Tsvankin “3-D moveout velocity analysis and parameter estimation for orthorhombic media”, in Geophysics Vol. 64 (1999), pages 820-837, both herein incorporated by reference.
In terms of these anisotropic coefficients, the components of the P-wave slowness, as a function of polarization angles ψ and φ, look like:
wherein f0=1/(1−(Vs0/Vp0)2) is expressed in terms of the S- and P-wave seismic velocity in the reference direction m=3. In order to obtain data that can be inverted using this symmetry assumption, the azimutal orientation of each receiver should be known independently from the seismic data, e.g. by means of gyroscopic or self-orienting receivers or other determination.
As another example, vertical transverse isotropy may be assumed for vertical boreholes. This does not require VSP data under various azimuths, such that a relatively simple walk-away dataset may suffice. Only two parameters are required to suitably describe the anisotropy with such a symmetry. For instance, the Thomsen parameterization, on basis of δ and ε, may be employed as introduced in “Weak elastic anisotropy” by L. Thomsen in Geophysics Vol. 51 (1986), pages 1954-1966, herein incorporated by reference. Another suitable parameterization, in terms of δ and η, has been found useful, as well. The coefficient η corresponds to a anellipticity coefficient. These are tied to Tsvankin's orthorhombic parameters as δ=δ(1)=δ(2), and η=η(1)=η(2). The transverse isotropy requires that η(3)=0. Inserting these in the equations above yields (for directions i=1, 2):
and for direction 3 (along the reference direction):
Taking the last mentioned equation as example, a P-wave vertical slowness-polarization data set, representing q(ψ)≡p3, may suitably be extracted from a 2D walkaway VSP data set comprising a representation of a full wave-field recorded by an array of multi-component geophones.
As a suitable function, relating P-wave polarization angle to P-wave slowness, may be selected:
whereby, of the three free parameters 1/Vp0, δVSP, and ηVSP, δVSP relates to the Thomsen anisotropic parameter δ as δVSP=(f0−1)δ, and ηVSP relates to the Thomsen anisotropic parameter η as ηVSP=(2f0−1)η, whereby f0 is defined as before [f0=1/(1−(Vs0/Vp0)2)]. Thus, one of the three free parameters, 1/Vp0, is independent of formation anisotropy and shear wave velocity information whereas information of shear wave velocity is absorbed together with formation anisotropy parameters in the other two free parameters δVSP, and ηVSP.
The P-wave vertical slowness-polarization data set may thus be inverted without having to make an assumption or needing a-priory knowledge on vertical shear wave velocity, allowing an accurate finding of regression values for all three free parameters by fitting the selected function to the P-wave slowness-polarization data set.
The method may optionally be supplemented by subsequently calculating values for the one or more anisotropy parameters (e.g. δ and η, in the case of vertical transverse isotropic media) from the regression values. This may be achieved by inserting information of shear wave velocity as may be obtained from an a-priory determination from other measurements (such as sonic logs) or may be obtained from the VSP data set. One way of estimating a value for the S-wave vertical velocity is by applying the so-called virtual checkshot method, as set forth by Andrey Bakulin, Albena Mateeva, Rodney Calvert, Patsy Jorgensen in an SEG-paper entitled “Virtual Shear Checkshot with airguns”, which is accessible online via http://abstracts.seg.org/techprog.cfm?CFID=44610&CFTOKEN=21528272&pLastMeetingID=3&pMode=3&pSession=27& and by Albena Mateeva, Andrey Bakulin, Patsy Jorgensen, and Jorge L. Lopez in a paper entitled “Accurate Estimation of Subsalt Velocities Using Virtual Checkshots” published as OTC paper 17869-PP. Both papers are herein incorporated by reference.
For typical vertical velocity ratios the dependence of f0 on VS0/VP0 may be approximated as f0≈1+(VS0/VP0)2. Assuming, for instance, VS0/VP0=0.5 as used by Williamson and Maocec (cited above), δ and η in δVSP and ηVSP respectively have prefactors 0.25 and 1.5. Therefore, the η-term is considered to dominate the δ-term for polarization angles of ψ>≈25 degrees from the vertical. At smaller angles, the influence of δ on q(ψ) is mostly overshadowed by the vertical P-wave velocity VP0 Thus δ is less tightly constrained than η by the inversion.
As comparison, the dashed line shows the result of a calculation based on the above-derived parameterization which was derived for the vertical transverse isotropy case under the weak anisotropy approximation, taking VP0=3 km/s (10 kft/s), δVSP=0.03 and ηVSP=0.42. It can be seen that not only the solid square data points (▪), corresponding to the lowest anisotropy, match the dashed line quite well, but surprisingly the other data points corresponding to moderate and strong anisotropy do so, too. Thus, the new parameterization is applicable in situations of moderate and strong anisotropy.
The method as set forth above, and the parameters that it produces, may be used for improving the exploration and development of hydrocarbon fluid containing fields. In one example, the parameters may be utilized to provide information on an anisotropic velocity field, which may be used to produce seismic images that are crisper and geologically more meaningful than images created with an isotropic velocity model.
In other examples, the parameters δVSP, and ηVSP are useful in their own right. For instance, δVSP is responsible for describing near-vertical behavior of q(ψ), while ηVSP governs the vertical slowness behavior at larger angles. The parameters δVSP and ηVSP may be correlated with their physical causes, including lithology, fractures, stresses, etc., which enables obtaining valuable information about these which may the localization of economically producible hydrocarbons better achievable.
In
to P-wave slowness data using receivers at various depths (shown by open data points). The two lines on either side of line 26 represents the standard deviation in the regression values. The δVSP has a value of approximately 0.1 in layer 22 of the shaly sandstones, and significantly deviates from this value in the other layers 22 and 24. A gamma-ray log is shown in the right hand side of
A surprising correlation is revealed, because δVSP in
δVSP is presently thought to correlate better with lithology than Thomsen parameter δ.
A lateral extrapolation of δVSP away from the well may even be made to build a 3D anisotropy model. The parameters may also be used to study stress, if the anisotropy is stress-induced or has a stress-induced component to it. Examples could include stress-induced anisotropy due to depletion and/or production from a reservoir, or due to tectonic forces for instance due to presence of a nearby salt body. The parameters δVSP and ηVSP may also form the basis for time-lapse, or 4D, studies of reservoirs during production.
Hence, the methodology as set forth above may be part of a method of producing a mineral hydrocarbon containing fluid from an earth formation, wherein the regression values of the parameters from the selected function relating P-wave polarization angle to P-wave slowness are correlated with the presence and/or nature of a mineral hydrocarbon containing fluid reservoir. A wellbore may then be drilled to and into the reservoir, completed in any conventional way such that the mineral hydrocarbon containing fluid may be produced from the reservoir via the completed wellbore.
Examples of mineral hydrocarbons include oil and natural gas.
Instructions for analyzing vertical seismic profile data as set forth above, may be provided in the form of a computer readable medium storing such instructions. By way of example, and not limitation, computer readable media may comprise computer storage media and communication media. Computer storage media may include volatile and/or nonvolatile memory forms such as a read only memory (ROM) and random access memory (RAM). Volatile/nonvolatile computer storage media may be either removable or non-removable. For example only, a hard disk drive may read from or write to nonremovable, nonvolatile magnetic media, a magnetic disk drive may read from or write to a removable, non-volatile magnetic disk, and an optical disk drive may read from or write to a removable, nonvolatile is optical disk such as a CD ROM or other optical media. Other removable/non-removable, volatile/non-volatile computer storage media that can be used include, but are not limited to, magnetic tape cassettes, flash memory cards, digital versatile disks, digital video tape, solid state RAM, solid state ROM, and the like.
The invention has been described in the context of preferred and other embodiments and not every embodiment of the invention has been described. Obvious modifications and alterations to the described embodiments are available to those of ordinary skill in the art. The disclosed embodiments are not intended to limit or restrict the scope or applicability of the invention conceived of by the Applicants, but rather, in conformity with the patent laws, Applicants intend to protect all such modifications and improvements to the full extent that such falls within the scope or range of equivalent of the following claims.
The present application claims priority benefits of U.S. provisional application 60/826,501 filed 21 Sep. 2006.
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