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GC
Impedance
Inversion May Help Characterize Reservoir*
Satinder Chopra1and Ritesh Kumar Sharma1
Search and Discovery Article #41099 (2012)
Posted December 17, 2012
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the author, in AAPG Explorer, December, 2012, and entitled "A Solid Step Toward Accurate Interpretations". Editor of Geophysical Corner is Satinder Chopra ([email protected]). Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic. AAPG©2012
1 Arcis Corp., Calgary, Canada ([email protected])
In the November 2012 Geophysical Corner we discussed the unsupervised seismic waveform classification method, which provides qualitative information on lithology in terms of facies variation in a given subsurface target zone. While this information is useful, more work needs to be done for characterizing such formations of interest in terms of porosity and fluid content. For this purpose,
impedance
inversion of seismic data could be used, which essentially means transforming seismic amplitudes into
impedance
values. Here we discuss here such
impedance
characterization of the formations of interest.
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Seismic signals have a narrow frequency bandwidth, say 8-80 Hz. Frequencies below 8 or 10 Hz are lost either by bandpass filtering circuits in the recording instruments or while processing of seismic data to eliminate the low frequency noise usually present in the data. Sonic logs, on the other hand, have a very broad frequency bandwidth, extending from 0 to well over many kilohertz. While the high frequencies show the high-resolution information on the log, the low frequencies exhibit the basic velocity structure or the subsurface compaction trend. As these low frequencies are not present in the seismic data, the When seismic data are transformed into In Figure 1, the addition of the low-frequency trend is demonstrated to the inverted In the November 2012 Geophysical Corner we discussed the seismic waveform classification method for describing the facies variation of Middle Jurassic Doig sandstones in Western Canada. We pick up the same example to determine the changes of In Figure 2a we show a horizon slice from the relative acoustic The May 2008 Geophysical Corner described a thin-bed reflectivity inversion method that outputs a reflectivity series - and demonstrates that the apparent resolution of the inversion output is superior to the resolution of the input seismic data used to generate the reflectivity response. This aspect makes the method ideal for detailed delineation and characterization of thin reservoirs. We derived the reflectivity from the seismic data used for generating the
We thank Arcis Seismic Solutions for permission to present this work. |
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