The Geophysical Corner is a regular column in the EXPLORER, edited by Bob A. Hardage, senior research scientist at the Bureau of Economic Geology, the University of Texas at Austin. This month’s column is titled "Distinguishing Fizz-Gas and Commercial Gas Reservoirs With Multicomponent Seismic Technology."
Technology Can Avoid the Fizzles
Fizz-gas and commercial-gas
reservoirs look identical in stacked P-P
seismic data and in migrated P-P
images -- and the failure of traditional
post-stack P-P data to distinguish
between these two gas saturations has
frustrated efforts by operators to avoid
drilling fizz-gas targets for decades.
A solution now appears to be
available through the use of
multicomponent seismic technology.
Specifically, when multicomponent
seismic data are used to illuminate gas
reservoirs, the converted-shear (P-SV)
image constructed from these data can
distinguish between fizz-gas and
commercial-gas reservoirs.
Key petrophysical properties that
need to be considered when applying
multicomponent seismic technology to
gas exploration are summarized in
figure 1. This figure shows a reservoir
interval (labeled 1) overlying a water
accumulation (labeled 2).
Variations in bulk density ρ, P-wave
velocity VP, and S-wave velocity VS are
tabulated for three reservoir conditions:
water, fizz gas and commercial gas.
The comments in the table describe
the changes in these rock properties
that occur within the target layer as the
seismic imaging moves along horizon
AA´ and crosses the fluid contact
boundary that separates region 1
(reservoir) from region 2 (non-reservoir).
If equations for P-P and P-SV
reflectivities are reduced to their
simplest forms, P-P reflectivity is found
to be a function of Δρ, ΔVP and ΔVS, the
parameters tabulated in figure 1. In
contrast, P-SV reflectivity is a function of
only Δρ and ΔVS, and ΔVP is not
involved.
This distinction between the
petrophysical parameters that influence
P-P and P-SV reflectivites is important.
Seismic reflectivity along interface
AA´ shown in figure 1 is critical to
interpreting pore fluid conditions within
the reservoir unit. For both commercial-gas
and fizz-gas conditions, the lateral
change in P-wave reflectivity along
horizon AA′ will be large where the
seismic image transitions from reservoir
to non-reservoir conditions because the
lateral change in P-wave velocity (ΔVP)
is large across the fluid contact
boundary for both high and low gas
saturations.
As a result, both commercial-gas and
fizz-gas targets look identically bright in
stacked and migrated P-P seismic
images.
Keeping in mind that P-SV reflectivity
is influenced by only Δρ and ΔVS, a
second concept documented in figure 1 is that the lateral change in P-SV
reflectivity will be rather large across the
fluid contact boundary only if the
reservoir contains a commercial
saturation of gas.
Of the three reservoir options listed in
figure 1, there is a significant lateral
change in bulk density Δρ across the
fluid contact boundary only for a highgas
saturation condition. For a fizz-gas
reservoir, the lateral variation in P-SV
reflectivity will be small or nonexistent
because neither bulk density ρ nor
S-wave velocity VS varies significantly as
the pore-fluid conditions change laterally
from fizz water to 100 percent pore
water. Commercial gas should thus
appear brighter in P-SV images than fizz
gas does.
To confirm these principles, P-P and
P-SV images across a fizz-gas reservoir
are shown in a side-by-side display in
figure 2. The reservoir is a bright spot in
the P-P image, but there is no anomaly
in the P-SV image.
P-P and P-SV images of a
commercial-gas reservoir are shown in
figure 3. Again, the reservoir is a bright
spot in the P-P image, illustrating it is not
possible to use only the stacked and
migrated P-P data in figures 2 and 3 to
distinguish fizz gas from commercial
gas. However, the commercial-gas
reservoir in figure 3 creates a modest
amplitude anomaly in the P-SV image.
This P-SV reflectivity behavior is
predicted by the large lateral variation in
bulk density Δρ listed for a commercialgas
target in figure 1.
The difference between this P-SV
reflectivity across a commercial-gas
reservoir and the P-SV reflectivity across
a fizz-gas reservoir shown in figure 2 allows fizz-gas reservoirs to be
distinguished from commercial-gas
reservoirs with rather good success.
A major challenge to overcome when
using multicomponent seismic data is
that an interpreter has to decide how to
accurately depth register the P-P and
P-SV images that are compared.
Note in the examples in figures 2 and 3, the target in P-SV image space is
positioned at time coordinates that are
approximately (but not exactly!) a factor
of two greater than the time coordinates
of the target position in P-P image
space. The time-warping factor that
should be used to adjust P-P and P-SV
images to a depth-equivalent
interpretation space varies laterally and
vertically throughout seismic image
space and will rarely be the same
function at any two reservoir targets.
Some of the techniques used to
define these dynamic and spatially
varying time-warping factors were
discussed in last month’s “Geophysical
Corner.”
Acknowledgements: Devon and
Seitel Data provided the 4C OBC data
used in this research. The U.S.
Department of Energy provided the
research funding. |