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VSP Data in Comparison to the Check Shot Velocity Survey*
By
Robert J. Brewer1
Search and Discovery Article #40059 (2002)
*Adapted for online presentation from two articles (comprising a series) by the author in AAPG Explorer, entitled respectively, “VSP is a Check Shot Step Up,” or “The Check Shot Velocity Survey: Is It Enough?” (February, 2000), and “VSP Survey Meets Accuracy Demands,” or “Additional Computed Product Utility” (March, 2000). Appreciation is expressed to the author, M. Ray Thomasson, former Chairman of the AAPG Geophysical Integration Committee, and Larry Nation, AAPG Communications Director, for their support of this online version.
1Halliburton Energy Services, Houston ([email protected]).
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General Statement
The idea of lowering a geophone down a well bore to get a better handle on rock velocity is hardly a new concept. Geophysicists have engaged in the practice with increasing precision since the1930s -- around the time when the first geophones were designed to withstand the rigors of the borehole.
The presence of a drilled well presents a truly unique opportunity to:
· Investigate a target formation more closely with acoustic measurements. · Minimize subsurface attenuation phenomena. · Measure depth accurately. · Overcome the formidable limitation of all surface geophysical measurements -- the lack of accurate depth control.
Sonic Logs and Check Shots
Geophysicists are familiar with the velocity survey's one-way acoustic travel time as a critical component that is necessary to help convert surface seismic's two-way travel time to depth. In the absence of the check shot velocity survey, accurate velocity information can sometimes be extracted from the tried and true sonic log. Relying solely on sonic logs, however, may entail considerable risk involving interval velocity errors.
What may
not be clearly acknowledged are how limited check shot data are -- and
how very limited sonic logs travel times are inconsistently aiding the
time to depth
When the sonic log is used to produce a synthetic seismogram for surface seismic correlation purposes, one hopes that a check shot velocity survey is available from the same well to calibrate the sonic log. Calibration and correction of the sonic log often may be needed because the production of a synthetic seismogram from a sonic log is a hybridization and transform process that can introduce seismic travel time error if cycle skipping, tool sticking, and washed-out zone effects are present in the sonic log. The sonic log is also of very limited use in identifying interval velocity inversions -- or any abrupt rock density and velocity change that are an appreciable distance from the well. The check shot velocity survey can be used to produce a corrected sonic log, allowing sonic log pitfalls to be alleviated by enabling a data processing analyst to correlate effectively and more accurately through questionable zones that were traversed by the sonic logging tool downhole.
A check-shot-corrected sonic log also makes it easier to determine interval velocities between key formations, since familiar formation boundaries can be readily recognized from the sonic log. If density log information is also available, a more accurate synthetic seismogram log integration usually results.
A check
shot velocity survey measures a much larger cylindrical volume of rock
compared to the relative soda straw volume measured by the sonic log.
The check shot survey and the more precise vertical seismic profile (VSP)
should at least be considered in the logging program of every
exploration and key development well being planned to minimize or
eliminate the ever-present and costly danger of surface seismic time to
depth
Borehole
seismic data are the most effective correlation bridge available between
the well bore and the surface seismic data. Borehole seismic data that
include the check shot velocity survey and the VSP can measure large
volumes of rock -- and will indicate the presence of velocity anomalies,
which may be totally missed by the sonic log. These velocity anomalies
must be measured and dealt with accurately when mapping the velocity
fields that are so critical to an effective surface-seismic time to
drill-depth Some History on VSP
The vertical seismic profile (VSP) is a truly remarkable, versatile, and, unfortunately, under-utilized innovation--under-utilized perhaps because of its greater cost than the more routine check shot velocity survey and the possible over-reliance within the industry on 3-D surface seismic data.
The effective utility of the VSP was developed by the Soviets in the 1960s, made its way into Europe, and finally arrived in earnest in the United States in the 1970s. The VSP was quite an industry sensation when it started to be used in this country because of its "a look ahead" of the drill bit capability and its use as an aid in predicting the depth at which a target formation would be encountered after drilling continued.
The Look Ahead or Prediction Ahead of the Bit (PAB) VSP, which is actually an inversion routine performed during the data processing of ideally zero-offset VSP survey data, has proven itself as a useful exploration tool over the years. It has been used to predict the depth of overpressured zones ahead of drilling offshore wells and to locate granite-sediment and salt-sediment interfaces.
A zero- or near-offset VSP survey has the energy source positioned as close as possible to the well head to focus the energy down and ahead of the well bore -- and is the preferred geometry for well correlation as opposed to the offset VSP survey configuration, which positions the energy source away from the well head to image a distance laterally away from the well.
Look ahead
offset VSP VSP Perspective
The VSP is simply a precision level step change up from the check shot velocity survey. The basic difference between the check shot survey and the VSP is that the VSP measures nearly all seismic waveforms in the well bore (up-going and down-going energy), whereas the check shot velocity survey measures basically only the down-going energy (Figure 1). Note that a VSP is also a check shot velocity survey -- but a check shot velocity survey is not a VSP!
Check shot velocity survey measurements are typically taken every 250-500 feet downhole and were designed to measure the down-going waveforms used in velocity determination. VSP measurements are much more closely spaced (50-100 feet).
The VSP,
like the check shot survey, also measures down-going energy. The smaller
measurement interval (level interval) required by the VSP is necessary
also to record the reflected energy in the well bore. The basic computed
product of the VSP is known as a corridor stack, which in appearance
resembles the synthetic seismogram. In reality it is a vastly superior
well correlation tool, because it contains actual seismic reflection
data as well as the down-going
The
down-going
VSP
Pre-survey
ray trace modeling has gained wide acceptance and is used to design more
accurately offset VSP The VSP/CDP transform has been converted or "transformed" from its original recorded one-way time to two-way time and displayed at a convenient scale to match the surface seismic data it is to be correlated with (Figure 3). The VSP/CDP transform data set can be migrated, filtered, and processed just like any surface seismic data set.
Because VSP data has a broader bandwidth and contains high frequency events, subtle features like small faults, stratigraphic changes, and amplitude anomalies can be observed in the vicinity of the well bore, whereas they are not discernible on the surface seismic coverage in the same area (Figure 4). Note the marked improvement in resolution that the VSP/CDP transform yields in this example (Figure 5): It is a VSP/CDP transform display made from a vertical incident VSP survey, recorded to provide better resolution over a 2-D reconstruction line from a 3-D seismic volume prior to deepening this directional well bore.
A vertical incident VSP survey requires the energy source to be positioned at the surface directly over the downhole geophone tool. Vertical incident geometry is generally preferred over the rig source option and has proven to be a more accurate way to obtain velocity control and image a highly deviated borehole. Displaying the VSP/CDP Transform and the seismic section together yields a far more useful product for interpretation. Downhole VSP Tools
Downhole tool design has improved significantly over the last 20 years. Three-component geophone configurations are routine -- the tools have evolved from single component analog designs to digital multi-tool designs or actual downhole geophone arrays composed of up to 24 or more individual tools or satellites.
Multi-station tools greatly reduce the historic bane of bore hole
seismic
Logging While Drilling (LWD) sonic, check shot and VSP tools are available to meet the real-time demands of directional drilling. LWD tools designed to record borehole seismic data are becoming increasingly more sophisticated as LWD logging replaces conventional wireline logging on many directional wells.
Reduced Risk and Saved Money
The two
most important benefits of running a VSP survey are reduced risk and
saved drilling dollars. The VSP survey reduces risk by measuring the
seismic velocities accurately in the well bore; this allows accurate
time-to-depth
The
accurate velocity information from the VSP helps make the velocity
analysis involved in processing and stacking surface seismic data more
precise. VSP data also can be used to remove multiples from surface
seismic data by providing parameters for an earth filter inversion
process known as signature deconvolution. Accurate time-to-depth
Money is
saved early on with VSP
Most of
the VSP
The Future
The sonic
log and the check shot velocity survey have been the standard seismic
correlation tools for many years and have proven their utility -- but
today's exploration and production challenges require more precision.
The VSP survey meets that challenge, and is currently considered to be
the ultimate and most effective tool available for matching the well
bore to the sizable investment of surface seismic data that each
exploration company makes. More VSP |


