The present application claims benefit of U.S. Non-Provisional application Ser. No. 16/123,511 filed Sep. 6, 2018, which claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62,554,797 filed Sep. 6, 2017, the entire contents of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present application claims benefit of U.S. Non-Provisional application Ser. No. 16/123,511 filed Sep. 6, 2018, which claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62,554,797 filed Sep. 6, 2017, the entire contents of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates generally to the correction of azimuthal formation, borehole and cement measurements based upon variations of the azimuthal distribution of output radiation of an electronic radiation source, and in a particular though non-limiting embodiment to a method and means to use the detected output of multiple azimuths of a non-isotope-based radiation source tube disposed within a borehole logging tool to determine accurate, constant corrections to be substituted during the computation of detector count-rate output prior to, or during, computation of the density of materials surrounding the tool.
Well or borehole logging is the practice of making an accurate record, known as a well log, of the geologic formations through which a borehole creates a path or conduit. Well logging activities are performed during all phases of an oil and gas well's development: drilling and evaluation, completion, production and abandonment.
The oil and gas industry logs rock and fluid properties to find hydrocarbon-bearing strata in the formations intersected by a borehole. The logging procedure consists of lowering a tool on the end of a wireline into the well to measure the properties of the formation. An interpretation of these measurements is then made to locate and quantify potential zones containing hydrocarbons and the specific depths at which these zones exist.
When considering the current state of the art in borehole logging tool technology, the formation-facing detectors are calibrated through the use of small radioisotopes which are located within the detector assembly. Radio-isotopes such as 137Cs are employed due to the dominant and narrow energy peaks which do not contribute greatly to the output count rate of the detector but can be actively used as an energy marker by the detector electronics to modify the gain control voltage of the photomultiplier tube such that the output is stabilized against temperature variations and other environmental factors.
However, currently available borehole logging tools employ a primary radiation source to illuminate the formation surrounding the borehole. Due to the relatively long half-life of the radioactive isotopes employed as primary radiation sources, their output is highly stable and predictable over the period of a borehole logging operation, the exact output of the isotope can be measured at surface prior to the operation to use as a reference point.
As a result of the highly stable output of the primary radiation source, and the gain stabilization control isotope method employed within the detector systems, the only two major variants in the statistical output of the formation-facing detectors are the:
a) change in scattering and attenuation properties of the formation itself; and
b) the offset of the detectors from the borehole wall, which introduces ‘direct’ radiation from the primary source being counted by the detectors as a result of borehole propagation of the primary radiation through the borehole fluid between the primary source and the detector.
The former being the desired measurement and the latter being compensated for by using more than one detector, each linearly offset along the longitudinal direction of the borehole from the primary source.
If x-ray source tubes are used as a replacement for the radio-active isotope, instabilities are introduced into the output of the source. Typically, the output of an x-ray source can be controlled by means of an electrical feedback loop, consisting of a sensing circuit connected to the highest voltage stage of the high voltage power supply, which is then used to regulate the input voltage of a high voltage power supply with the goal of stabilizing the supply voltage of an x-ray tube or ion-tube (such as a Pulsed Neutron Generator).
In borehole cement evaluation logging, for example, it is imperative to ensure the greatest possible accuracy of data, whereby any variation in that data is a result of the change in scattering and attenuation properties of the materials surrounding the tool (formation density) or controllable borehole effects, such as an eccentric tool disposed within said borehole.
When using electronic radiation emitting source tubes as a replacement for radio-active isotope-based radiation sources, an inherent variability is introduced into the measurement due to the unstable nature of the output of the source tube and its power supply—an issue which is not encountered during the use of highly stable long half-life radio isotopes. In addition, the point of impingement upon the target of the electron (or ion) beam within the source tube can vary such that the actual point from which radiation is emitted is no longer co-axial to the tool or detector arrangement, but instead drifts radially in random azimuths (away from center).
Depending on the position that the electron/ion beam impinges upon the surface of the target plane, the distribution of the radiation field around the tool will vary. This will introduce inconsistencies into the detected count rates around the azimuth of the tool, and can detrimentally affect the accuracy of the computed density data if such geometrical variations are not accounted for. As a result, the variations in the measured data which would normally be attributable to casing, cement or formation density alone will contain a variable component of the geometric or electronic instability of the source tube itself.
However, small changes in the geometry of the source tube itself, due to thermal expansion or contraction, parasitic electronic charges causing electron beam movement, beam-spot focusing variations or target anode to collimation geometry variations, can lead to minor variations in the geometry and spectrum of the output beam of the source, directly affecting the accuracy of the formation count-rate measurement detrimentally.
Various means have been published which attempt to mitigate this issue by additional control of the source tube itself or through adaptive calibration of the formation-facing detectors. For example, US20180180764 to Teague et al. teaches of an x-ray based litho-density tool for measurement of formation surrounding a borehole, wherein a reference detector is used to monitor the output of the x-ray source such that the reference detector's output effects corrects the outputs of the detectors used to measure the density of the materials surrounding the borehole in order to correct for variations in the x-ray source output.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,564,948 B2 to Wraight et al. discloses a method wherein a reference detector is placed at the opposite end of a through-shielding channel (thereby collimating the primary x-ray signal) and additionally filtered via various materials to produce a bi-peak spectrum. The energy and intensity of the two peaks is then analyzed and used as a direct feedback to control either the input voltage or current, or both, of the x-ray tube in an attempt to stabilize the x-ray output.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,960,687 to Simon el al. discloses a method wherein a reference detector is placed at the opposite end of an elbowed through-shielding channel (thereby collimating the primary x-ray signal) and additionally filtered via various materials to produce a multi or bi-peak spectrum. The elbow geometry is employed to help the reference detector's tendency to saturate due to the intensity of a direct primary radiation beam. The energy and intensity of the peaks is then analyzed and used as a direct feedback to control or actively modify the control voltage for the stabilization gain of the formation facing detectors' photo multiplier tubes, in an attempt to actively compensate for the instabilities in the output of the x-ray source. Somewhat controversially, the '687 patent seeks to replace the inherent gain stability of an embedded micro-isotope-based approach with an unstable x-ray source instability-based feedback gain stabilization method. The logged data will therefore be permanently modified at the detector and all record of the actual statistical output, as compared to a micro-isotope gain stabilized detector, will be lost. Consequently, any control algorithm errors could not be corrected for later (for example, at the surface).
A measurement compensation mechanism for an electronic radiation source-based borehole logging tool that compensates for geometric variations in the direction output of an x-ray source is provided, the measurement compensation system including: at least one electronic radiation source; at least one radiation shield; at least three reference detectors; and at least one borehole measuring radiation detector.
A method of compensating the measurement of an electronic radiation source-based borehole logging tool that compensates for geometric variations in the direction output of an x-ray source is also provided, the method including at least: measuring an azimuthal distribution of radiation intensities equidistant from an electronic radiation source in order to correct a measured radiation value of a borehole-measuring radiation detector relative to the borehole-measuring radiation detector's azimuthal measurement direction.
The methods and means described herein use the detected output of a plurality of azimuths of a non-isotope-based radiation source disposed tube within a borehole logging tool in order to determine accurate, constant corrections to be substituted during the computation of detector count-rate output prior to, or during, computation of the density of materials surrounding the tool.
In one example embodiment, an electronic-source-based borehole logging tool is deployed by wireline conveyance into a borehole, wherein the density of materials surrounding the borehole are measured by the tool. The tool is enclosed by a pressure housing that ensures well fluids are maintained outside of the housing.
With reference now to the attached figures,
With reference now to
In one embodiment, the ion-beam [201] impinges centrally/concentrically upon the target, wherein the summation of all monitoring detectors [204] outputs should be identical, and the outputs can be used to determine the variation in the overall source output, whereas the individual monitoring detector outputs can be used to determine the geometrical shift of the source-beam upon the target, and is further used to correct the borehole-measuring detector outputs for the variation in effective azimuthal source output as a function of source-beam position upon the target.
In another embodiment, the ion-beam [202, 203] impinges eccentrically upon the target, so that the monitoring detectors [205, 206] located radially closest to the ion-beam position detect more radiation than those that are located radially more distant. The circular distribution of the detected radiation intensities measured by the monitoring detectors [204, 205, 206] are used to compute and ascribe a radial (or circular) function that forms the basis of an azimuthally distributed array of correction factors. The array of correction factors is then used to correct the outputs of any borehole-measuring detectors within the tool relative to their azimuthal location. For example. if the detected location of the ion-beam [201, 202, 203] has shifted towards the tool housing [108] in a specific azimuthal direction, then it is anticipated that the source output in that direction will be elevated compared to all other azimuthal directions. As a result, any output for a borehole-measuring detector located in that azimuthal direction will be reduced relatively in order to compensate for the ion-beam-dependent locale source output elevation in that direction, and any other borehole-measuring detector located in other azimuthal directions reduced or increased accordingly with the computed azimuthal array of correction factors.
In another embodiment, the summation of all monitoring detectors [204, 205, 206] is used to measure variations in the overall output of the electronic radiation source.
In one embodiment a circular array of monitoring detectors [301] is coaxially located around the source tube located within the tool housing [108], and not directly in the radiation beam path of the source, rather located behind shielding [303] to reduce the possibility for saturation of the detectors by illumination by an amount of radiation outside of the operating specification of the detectors. The monitoring detectors [301] are being used to monitor the electronic and geometrical variations of a conically formed radiation beam within a conical collimation [302] formed by the conical surfaces of the radiation shielding [303] around the ion-source.
In one example embodiment, a number reference detectors comprising a scintillator crystal (such as Sodium Iodide, Cesium Iodide, or Lanthanum Bromide) or a direct-conversion crystal (such as Cadmium Telluride or Cadmium Zinc Telluride) with an embedded micro-isotope, used to stabilize detector gain, is located within the radiation shielding surrounding a source tube, each located in equally spaced azimuthal positions, thereby forming a radially symmetric arrangement around the radiation source.
In another embodiment, there are five reference detectors, all of which are located upon the same transverse plane, offset around 72 degrees from each other, while located upon the same coaxially located circumference around the radiation source emitter, but not necessarily upon the same transverse plane as the emitter.
In another embodiment, there are two reference detectors, all of which are located upon the same transverse plane, offset 120 degrees from each other, while located upon the same coaxially located circumference around the radiation source emitter but not necessarily upon the same transverse plane as the emitter.
In a further embodiment, a geometric distribution of the detectors [301] is used to monitor the radiation field being produced from source target. A summation of the monitoring detector outputs is used to determine the variation in the overall source output (intensity), whereas the individual monitoring detector outputs can be used to determine the geometrical shift of the source-beam upon the target and be further used to correct the casing/cement/formation detector outputs for the variation in effective azimuthal source output as a function of source-beam position upon the target. In this respect, the output of the detectors being used to measure casing, cement and formation (detecting counts from various depths of investigation) can be amended in real-time to correct for any geometric or electronic variations in the source beam distribution.
In another embodiment, the tool is located within a logging-while-drilling (LWD) string, rather than conveyed by wireline.
In another embodiment, the LWD provisioned tool is powered by mud turbines.
In another embodiment, the tool is combinable with other measurement tools such as neutron-porosity, natural gamma and/or array induction tools.
The foregoing specification is provided only for illustrative purposes, and is not intended to describe all possible aspects of the present invention. While the invention has herein been shown and described in detail with respect to several exemplary embodiments, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that minor changes to the description, and various other modifications, omissions and additions may also be made without departing from the spirit or scope thereof.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62554797 | Sep 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16123511 | Sep 2018 | US |
Child | 17837839 | US |