Imaging solutions for 4D quantitative interpretation
Abstract
During the production of a geomechanically active reservoir, massive pressure
depletion happens giving rise to geomechanical changes which can lead to significant
time-lapse signals across the reservoir and its surrounding. Therefore, geomechanical
characterisation of the reservoir and monitoring are very important for this type of
reservoir. In this thesis, I use pre-stack time-lapse time-shifts observed between 4D
seismic surveys for the geomechanical characterisation of the Ekofisk field which is a
geomechanically active field in the North Sea.
This thesis consists of three parts. Before using pre-stack time-shifts, post-stack time shifts can be a valuable guide toward the geomechanical activities of the reservoir. In
the first part, I estimate the post-stack time-shifts using various methods. Then, I
evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of each method in terms of their
performance in revealing the local time-lapse signals such as time-strains. I have found
that all the time-shift methods can successfully measure time-shifts. Among them, NLI
is the most outstanding method as it gives smooth time-shifts with relatively good
accuracy and the time-strains derived from there are more stable and interpretable.
In the second part, I use the reflectivity and velocity models of the Ekofisk field and
perform a finite-difference simulation to generate synthetic seismic data, followed by
imaging the generated data. Migrating baseline and monitor datasets with baseline
velocity model caused considerable mispositioning in the overburden resulting in false
amplitude-differences in the overburden. The analysis of the images shows that it is
not simply a matter of mispositioning that contaminates the seismic images. A more
serious problem caused by migration with an erroneous velocity model is the
defocusing of amplitudes. This problem cannot be solved by warping and requires a
more sophisticated remedy to correct the monitor’s migration velocity model.
In the third part, which is the major development of this thesis I measure the pre-stack
time-shifts and design a tomographic approach to utilise them for estimating the time lapse changes. First, I show how to measure the pre-stack time-shifts and discuss the
practical aspects of the process. Second, I design a ray-based tomography customised
for 4D application in order to utilise the pre-stack time-shifts and invert for velocity
changes that cause the time-shifts. Finally, I extend the tomography method into an
anisotropic inversion where both the time-lapse velocity changes and the ratio of
lateral-to-vertical strains are inverted in a two-step inversion process. The two
products of the inversion can be used extensively in the geomechanical model
calibration of the reservoirs.
Overall, my PhD research has successfully measured the time-lapse velocity changes
and the ratio of lateral-to-vertical strains. The anisotropic time-lapse tomography is a
new paradigm in the pre-stack time-lapse seismic analysis and will be an integrated
part of the geomechanical characterisation of the reservoirs.