In the field of petroleum well drilling and logging, resistivity-logging tools are frequently used to provide an indication of the electrical resistivity of rock formations surrounding an earth borehole. Such information regarding resistivity is useful in ascertaining the presence or absence of hydrocarbons. A typical resistivity-logging tool includes a transmitter antenna and a pair of receiver antennas located at different distances from the transmitter antenna along the axis of the tool. The transmitter antenna is used to create electromagnetic fields in the surrounding formation. In turn, the electromagnetic fields in the formation induce an electrical voltage in each receiver antenna. Due to geometric spreading and absorption by the surrounding earth formation, the induced voltages in the two receiving antennas have different phases and amplitudes.
Experiments have shown that the phase difference (Φ) and amplitude ratio (attenuation, A) of the induced voltages in the receiver antennas are indicative of the resistivity of the formation. The formation region (as defined by a radial distance from the tool axis) to which such a resistivity measurement pertains is a function of the frequency of the transmitter and the distance from the transmitter to the mid-point between the two receivers. Thus, one may achieve multiple radial depths of investigation of resistivity either by providing multiple transmitters at different distances from the receiver pair or by operating a given transmitter at multiple frequencies, or both.
In addition to varying depths of investigation, resistivity logging tools may be provided with a directional sensitivity by tilting one or more of the transmitter and receiver antennas as described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,265,552 to Michael Bittar. As explained in the Bittar patent, if the resistivities corresponding to the various rotational orientations are different, such differences often indicate the direction of a boundary between formations having different resistivities. In directional drilling, it is often the goal to steer the drill into a formation bed and to “follow” (to drill substantially parallel to) one of the boundaries of the bed to maximize the extent of the borehole within the bed. When implemented as logging-while-drilling (“LWD”) tools, the directional resistivity-logging tools provide valuable measurements for such geosteering applications.
Existing resistivity measurement tools for geosteering provide measurement ranges of up to 6 m (20 ft), which may not be enough in many situations. Moreover, such tools may not perform well in the oil fields of Saudi Arabia, where resistivity logs exhibit poor contrasts. Halliburton has recently proposed an acoustic measurement technique as an alternative basis for geosteering. The acoustic tool may provide a measurement range of up to 15 m (50 ft).
A better understanding of the various disclosed embodiments can be obtained when the following detailed description is considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments thereof are shown by way of example in the drawings and will herein be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the drawings and detailed description are not intended to limit the invention to the particular form disclosed, but on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
Disclosed herein are various multimodal geosteering systems and methods. Some of the disclosed system embodiments include a downhole tool that makes geosteering measurements of at least two different types, e.g., measurements made with different forms energy. The geosteering measurement types employed by the foregoing systems and methods may include measurements of acoustic impedance, acoustic slowness, electrical resistivity, porosity, permeability, and density, among others. The geosteering measurements may be selectively communicated to the surface and/or selectively displayed to the driller based on programmable selection criteria such as distance to a detected boundary, measurement contrast, tool resolution, display scale, or user preferences. Alternatively the boundary measurements may be overlaid or combined to provide as much information as possible to aid the geosteering process.
In at least some of the disclosed method embodiments, a downhole tool makes geosteering measurements with two or more different forms of energy. As boundaries are detected by the different measurement types, the tool (or the control system at the surface) combines the measurements or selects a subset of the measurements for communication to the surface and/or display to the driller. The method embodiments may rely on a number of bases for combining or selecting the different geosteering measurement types, including range, resolution, accuracy, contrast, and user preferences.
The disclosed tool configurations and operations are best understood in the context of the larger systems in which they operate. Accordingly, an illustrative geosteering environment is shown in
The drill bit 14 is just one piece of a bottom-hole assembly that typically includes one or more drill collars (thick-walled steel pipe) to provide weight and rigidity to aid the drilling process. Some of these drill collars may include logging instruments to gather measurements of various drilling parameters such as position, orientation, weight-on-bit, borehole diameter, etc. The tool orientation may be specified in terms of a tool face angle (rotational orientation), an inclination angle (the slope), and compass direction, each of which can be derived from measurements by magnetometers, inclinometers, and/or accelerometers, though other sensor types such as gyroscopes may alternatively be used. In one specific embodiment, the tool includes a 3-axis fluxgate magnetometer and a 3-axis accelerometer. As is known in the art, the combination of those two sensor systems enables the measurement of the tool face angle, inclination angle, and compass direction. In some embodiments, the tool face and hole inclination angles are calculated from the accelerometer sensor output. The magnetometer sensor outputs are used to calculate the compass direction.
A geosteering system further includes a tool 26 to gather measurements of formation properties from which boundary detection signals can be derived. Using these measurements in combination with the tool orientation measurements, the driller can steer the drill bit 14 along a desired path 18 using any one of various suitable directional drilling systems, including steering vanes, a “bent sub”, and a rotary steerable system.
A pump 20 circulates drilling fluid through a feed pipe 22 to top drive 10, downhole through the interior of drill string 8, through orifices in drill bit 14, back to the surface via the annulus around drill string 8, and into a retention pit 24. The drilling fluid transports cuttings from the borehole into the pit 24 and aids in maintaining the borehole integrity. Moreover, a telemetry sub 28 coupled to the downhole tools 26 can transmit telemetry data to the surface via mud pulse telemetry. A transmitter in the telemetry sub 28 modulates a resistance to drilling fluid flow to generate pressure pulses that propagate along the fluid stream at the speed of sound to the surface. One or more pressure transducers 30, 32 convert the pressure signal into electrical signal(s) for a signal digitizer 34. Note that other forms of telemetry exist and may be used to communicate signals from downhole to the digitizer. Such telemetry may employ acoustic telemetry, electromagnetic telemetry, or telemetry via wired drillpipe.
The digitizer 34 supplies a digital form of the pressure signals via a communications link 36 to a computer 38 or some other form of a data processing device. Computer 38 operates in accordance with software (which may be stored on information storage media 40) and user input via an input device 42 to process and decode the received signals. The resulting telemetry data may be further analyzed and processed by computer 38 to generate a display of useful information on a computer monitor 44 or some other form of a display device. For example, a driller could employ this system to obtain and monitor drilling parameters, formation properties, and the path of the borehole relative to detected formation boundaries 46 and 48.
In at least some embodiments, the multimodal geosteering tools of the present disclosure employ tilted antennas for electromagnetic resistivity measurements such as those disclosed by Michael Bittar in U.S. Pat. No. 7,265,552. As shown in
The resistivity measurements may be made in accordance with the techniques disclosed in previously-cited U.S. Pat. No. 7,265,552. Specifically, a transmitter coil 408 transmits an electromagnetic wave that propagates through the formation surrounding the borehole, thereby generating a signal in a receiving coil 410. In the illustrative embodiment, the transmitter coil 408 is tilted to provide azimuthal sensitivity, but such sensitivity can alternatively or additionally be supplied by tilting the receiver coil 410. Multiple transmitter and/or receiver coils may be employed to improve measurement accuracy and provide multiple depths of investigation. From the measurements of signal attenuation and phase shift, it becomes possible to determine azimuthal resistivity measurements and boundary detection signals. (A number of suitable boundary detection signal determination methods are disclosed in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/835,619, filed Aug. 8, 2007 and entitled “Tool for Azimuthal Resistivity Measurement and Bed Boundary Detection (Atty Dkt 1391-681.01).)
The acoustic measurements may be made in accordance with the techniques disclosed in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______, filed ______ and entitled “Acoustic Radial Profiling via Frequency Domain Processing” by inventor Jennifer Market (Client Dkt 022741WO). Specifically, an acoustic source 412 transmits an acoustic wave that propagates through the formation surrounding the borehole and generates signals in the acoustic detectors 414 arranged along the length of the tool. An acoustic isolator 416 may be included to attenuate and delay the acoustic wave that propagates within the tool body. Because the acoustic isolator 416 also attenuates vibration from the drill bit, the bulk of the tool electronics and receivers may be located up-string from the isolator.
A directional acoustic source 412 and/or directional acoustic detectors 414 are employed to provide azimuthal sensitivity to the acoustic measurements. Sufficient directionality may be achieved by simply positioning the source and detectors flush on one side of the tool as shown in
Semblance processing for acoustic logging tools is well known as a technique for measuring the slowness (inverse velocity, measured in units of length per unit of time) of acoustic waves propagating in the formation. Various suitable techniques exist for determining semblance as a function of frequency and slowness (see, e.g., the previously-cited Market application, and B. Mandal, U.S. Pat. No. 7,099,810, among others). Correlation and covariance determinations are closely related to semblance and may be used as alternatives to the semblance calculation.
At each given frequency, peaks in the semblance function will indicate the slowness of the acoustic waves having that frequency. The general range of the slowness value is usually indicative of the wave type (shear wave, pressure wave, etc.), and the specific slowness value is characteristic of the formation through which it travels. Moreover, because the wavelength λ of acoustic waves is λ=1/sf, where s is slowness and f is frequency, the semblance function S(f,s) can be transformed into a function of wavelength and slowness by a simple substitution:
This transformed function is particularly useful because the depth of investigation provided by a given acoustic wavelength is roughly equal to the wavelength. Thus the semblance peaks in the transformed function characterize the formation at different depths of investigation. If the acoustic tool generates frequencies as low as 100 Hz, the depth of investigation may extend approximately 15 m (50 ft) into the formation.
When azimuthally-sensitive measurements are made, the acoustic tool can provide a three dimensional map of the formation around the borehole, though perhaps not with the same resolution that is achievable using the electromagnetic resistivity measurements. Such a map can be used to detect the tool's approach toward (or retreat away from) a boundary between the current formation bed and a neighboring layer, preferably with sufficient range so that the driller has time to adjust the borehole path to follow the boundary.
Image 502 illustrates a change in acoustic slowness measurements centered in the direction of the “low-side” of the borehole as the tool progresses along the borehole, representing the acoustic tool's detection of the approaching bed boundary. Image 504 illustrates a change in bed boundary indicator signal value as the tool progresses along the borehole, representing the tilted antenna tool's detection of the approaching bed boundary. In this example, the tilted antenna tool offers a better image resolution, but its detection of the bed boundary lags behind the acoustic tool's detection of the approaching bed boundary. This detection lag may be a result of the acoustic tool's greater measurement range.
In
In
In this example, the remote data region 808 may show only measurements and/or boundaries derived from seismic survey data. The intermediate data region 806 may additionally show measurements and/or boundaries derived from the acoustic slowness measurements. The innermost data region 804 may additionally show measurements and/or boundaries derived from electromagnetic resistivity measurements.
In some embodiments, all of the available geosteering data will be overlaid (or possibly combined using a weighted average) on the display, possibly with the option for the user to toggle on and off the display of measurements from each source. Such toggling provides the user with one way to determine the source of a given boundary or measurement, or enables the user to eliminate unhelpful information from the display. In other embodiments, the availability of better measurement data (optionally defined as data having a higher resolution or a better measurement contrast) in a given region will cause the system to display that data to the exclusion of less helpful data. Thus the displayed data may progress from one measurement type to another across the data regions. In any event, the driller may be provided with measurements that enable the clearest understanding of the formations through which the drill string is progressing.
The assembly of
As the boundary is detected by increasingly precise technologies, the system can switch between geosteering techniques, thus obtaining the benefits of each technology, i.e., range and precision. As the tool approaches a boundary of interest, the basis for steering decisions will progress from low-resolution measurements to high-resolution measurements, permitting high-accuracy borehole and casing placement without sacrificing the efficiencies gained by having long-range information available.
In block 114, the system initiates geosteering tool operation. In some embodiments, the computer 38 has control over the tool's operating parameters, such as signal waveforms and frequencies, sampling rates, azimuthal sector sizes, data formats, etc. These parameters are set and the various transmitter-receiver arrangements for the different geosteering measurement types are engaged to start collecting and communicating measurements to computer 38.
In block 116, computer 38 receives measurements from the geosteering tool assembly, and in block 118, computer 38 determines the position and orientation of the tool. (As previously discussed, the bottom hole assembly includes instrumentation for measuring tool position and orientation.)
In some embodiments, the downhole tool preprocesses the tool measurements to reduce the required telemetry bandwidth. The preprocessing approaches may vary, but it is contemplated that the downhole tool will sum or average multiple measurements together to improve signal to noise ratio, and may further determine parameterized representations of the data to further compress the measurements into values of interest. In geosteering applications, it is expected that boundary detection will be of primary interest, and hence downhole tools may preprocess the data to detect and specify the relative position of boundaries. Such boundary information may be communicated to the surface in place of the raw data. Accordingly, the actions represented by blocks 120-122 and 126-130 can be performed downhole or by computer 38 or by different combinations thereof.
In block 120, the system analyzes the measurement data to determine if a boundary is in range of at least one of the geosteering measurement types. (A boundary can be identified by a gradient or discontinuity in the data that is consistent along at least one dimension.) If not, then in block 122, the measurement data is combined with previous measurements to extend or refine formation property logs (e.g., logs of acoustic slowness, resistivity, density, porosity, and permeability). In block 124, the computer 38 updates the display as necessary to reflect drilling progress and any changes to displayed formation properties and/or boundary locations. Thereafter additional measurements are collected in block 116.
If a boundary is detected within range of at least one of the geosteering measurement types, then in block 126, the system determines if the boundary can be detected by multiple measurement types. If so, then in block 128, the system combines or selects one or the boundary measurements. If the boundaries are determined to be the same, the relative boundary position (distance and direction) estimate can be improved by combining the boundary measurement information from the different measurement types. The position measurements may be averaged or a weighted sum may be performed. In some embodiments, the weighting coefficients are determined based on the measurement contrast, with higher weighting provided for the measurement type that measures the highest contrast across the boundary. In other embodiments, the weighting coefficients may be determined based on the known resolution of the different measurement types, with the higher-resolution measurement being more heavily weighted. In still other embodiments, the system simply selects the measurement type that offers the highest contrast or highest resolution from those measurement types that detect the boundary, and uses that measurement type to specify the distance and direction to the boundary.
In block 130, the boundary position measurement is used to add or refine the indication of a boundary at the appropriate position on the log and/or on the geosteering display. Then in block 122, the boundary position can be used to improve the formation property log estimates since such boundaries often influence tool measurements.
Though the method described above focuses on the case where a single boundary is detected, the method can be readily extended to cover situations where multiple boundaries are detected by some combination of the tools.
In some embodiments, the different geosteering measurements are used synergistically to refine the physical formation model, thereby improving measurement accuracy. For example, the acoustic measurements may provide azimuthally-sensitive invasion profile information that can be used to refine the resistivity measurements, thereby yielding more accurate boundary distance and direction calculations. The combination of acoustic and NMR measurements may offer insight into stress gradients that the driller can exploit to improve drilling speed and borehole longevity.
Moreover, because multiple measurement types are being employed, the tool performance is more robust. For example, in those regions where resistivity contrasts are low, the acoustic tool can carry the main burden for geosteering decisions. Conversely, where acoustic tools do not perform well, the resistivity tools can carry the burden, and the drillers still have enough information to operate efficiently.
Where two or more measurement types perform well, mismatches in boundary distance measurements may yield significant information. In some embodiments, the system identifies and highlights such mismatches for the user to view. Such mismatches may be indicative of fluid migration or potentially useful rock morphologies.
The geosteering systems and methods disclosed herein employ multiple measurement types for geosteering. In some embodiments, the tool employs azimuthally sensitive acoustic and resistivity measurements to detect nearby boundaries and enable steering relative to those boundaries. The acoustic measurements will have a longer range, while the electromagnetic measurements will have a higher resolution. In some variations, additional measurements having short ranges (e.g., nuclear magnetic resonance or gamma ray measurements) are also employed for even higher resolutions at shorter ranges. The tool measurements may be further combined with seismic data models covering significant portions of the reservoir at poor resolutions (e.g., 30 meter cubes).
Numerous variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art once the above disclosure is fully appreciated. It is intended that the following claims be interpreted to embrace all such variations and modifications.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US08/61571 | 4/25/2008 | WO | 00 | 3/23/2010 |