Click to view this article in PDF format.
CROSSWELL
SEISMIC
PROFILING: PRINCIPle TO APPLICATIONS*
By
Jerry M. Harris1 and Robert T. Langan2
Search and Discovery Article #40030 (2001)
1Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA.
2Chevron Petroleum Technology.
*Adapted for online presentation from the article by the same
authors, entitled “Crosswell
Seismic
Fills the Gap” in Geophysical Corner, AAPG
Explorer, January, 1997. Appreciation is expressed to the authors, along
with Spyros Lazaratos of TomoSeis Inc. and Mark Van Schaack of Stanford
University, and to M. Ray Thomasson, former Chairman of the AAPG Geophysical
Integration Committee, and Larry Nation, AAPG Communications Director, for their
support of this online version.
|
|
Much
is being written about using Core
and log Crosswell
Crosswell
A
complete survey can be as small as a few thousand traces or as large as
several hundred thousand traces. Such factors as the well separation, the
thickness and structure of the imaging target, and the frequency content
of the received signal dictate the necessary size of a survey. The
distance between the source and receivers, which is on the order of the
well spacing, is considerably less than the propagation distances
associated with surface Crosswell
surveys currently employ a frequency band between 20 Hz and 2000 Hz,
depending on the type of source used, the distance between wells and the
attenuation characteristics of the zone under investigation. Resolution on
the order of 10 feet (3 meters) is possible. Crosswell In
Figure 3 comparison is made of a
crosswell velocity image and reflection image with modern surface Crosswell profiling is a technology for reservoir delineation, development, characterization, and monitoring, but not exploration. Monitoring changes in reservoir conditions (e.g. saturation or pressure) is easier than absolute imaging of reservoir properties (e.g., porosity), but monitoring requires multiple visits to the same site in order to obtain time-lapse images. In the United States, a majority of the crosswell activity has been in the San Joaquin Valley of California and the Permian Basin of West Texas, but there has been recent work in the Mid-Continent and the Gulf Coast as well. In the San Joaquin Valley, the primary interest has been managing the heat budget of thermal recovery processes. The well separations are usually small, the reservoirs shallow and the thermal recovery processes create large velocity changes that make it easy to monitor the progress of thermal fronts. The images used for monitoring are predominantly time-lapse tomograms, although reflection imaging has been used as well. The main difficulty with using crosswell profiling in this environment is that the sedimentary rocks are commonly quite attenuating, which can restrict the useful upper frequency range, and a powerful source may be required to propagate energy between wells. A second problem is that some wells will not hold water for a sufficient period of time, which prevents the use of fluid-coupled sources and receivers. In West Texas, the reservoirs are dominantly carbonates with favorable attenuation characteristics. As a result, frequencies as great as 2,000 Hz can propagate over hundreds or thousands of feet between wells. The high degree of vertical variability in the acoustic impedance in these carbonates generates many reflections helpful for reservoir characterization. The combination of smaller well separations associated with these mature fields and the good propagation characteristics permits the successful use of relatively low powered, high frequency sources that are cost-effective to deploy. Although
there are a variety of applications for which crosswell profiling is
technically feasible, for some of them the technique is currently too
expensive to implement on a routine, operational basis. For example,
successful imaging of CO2-saturation and -pressure effects on a
vertical scale of three meters has been attained in a pilot flood in a
carbonate reservoir in West Texas, but the cost of One
of the first applications where it is thought that crosswell profiling is
likely to find wide operational acceptance is in providing an accurate
“roadmap” for directional wells. It is becoming an increasingly common
practice to optimize recovery in a reservoir by targeting specific units
for a directional well. Directional wells are relatively expensive, and in
areas where the structure or stratigraphy between wells is not easily
predicted using traditional The acquisition systems currently available commercially are based on two different source technologies: · A small airgun that is impulsive and relatively widebanded. · Piezoelectric elements that are swept in frequency in a manner similar to surface vibrators. Both
sources are frequently used with hydrophone receiver arrays. The airgun
system has been used successfully in clastic rocks in Kansas at a well
separation exceeding 2,000 feet (600 meters), while the piezoelectric
system has been used in carbonates at a well separation of 1,800 feet (550
meters). Greater well separations are possible and are slated for future
projects. An axial hydraulic vibrator is currently under development by a
cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) between the U.S.
National Laboratories and numerous industry partners and was scheduled to
be commercially available by the time this article was published in the
AAPG Explorer. Because of its relatively high power, we expect it to be
applicable to large well separations and to other acquisition geometries,
such as that found in a Crosswell
images fill a resolution gap between the more traditional reservoir For
some applications, crosswell technology is currently moving from being a
purely research activity to being an operational technique. Among the
current barriers it faces in gaining a wider acceptance are the cost of
Recent advances in multi-level receiver systems
that can operate through production tubing and can be used simultaneously
in multiple wells will permit more rapid |
