Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
Submitted Abstract Objectives/Scope The prediction of fluid parameter related to hydrocarbon presence using seismic data has often been limited by the performance of probability density function in estimating fluid properties from seismic inversion results. A novel fluid bulk modulus inversion (fBMI) is a pre-stack seismic inversion technique that has been developed to allow a direct estimation of pore fluid bulk modulus (Kf) from seismic data. Real data application in Malay basin showcases that Kf volume can be used to pinpoint areas with high probability of hydrocarbon presence. Methods, Procedures, Process The fluid term AVO reflectivity (Russell et al., 2011) is used as the basis of our formulation and has been extended to allow direct estimation of pore fluid bulk modulus, shearmodulus, porosity parameter and density through standard least-square inversion. The novel formulation is able to relax the dependency of fluid terms on the porosity. To demonstrate this, verifications were made against standard linear AVO approximations. Our observation shows that the young tertiary basins such as the Malay basin the fluid bulk modulus values have a big contrast between hydrocarbon saturated and water bearing reservoirs with a minimum of 60% ratio difference. The inverted fluid bulk modulus volume provides thus a direct assessment of areas with high probability of hydrocarbon saturation. Results, Observations, Conclusions In this paper, the fBMI technique is showcased on a field in the Malay basin. The outcome is demonstrated on a well panel analysis for four wells located across the study area (Figure 1). The inverted fluid bulk modulus extracted along a horizon representing the top of target reservoir is shown in Figure 2b. The blue color indicates high bulk modulus corresponds to water-bearing zone, while the yellow-red color range corresponding to low hydrocarbon-bearing zones. The areas of low fluid bulk modulus values at the north-western region are calibrated to known production zones in that region. fBMI shows areas that delineate high probability of hydrocarbon presence and provides a quantitative measure in terms of fluid parameter directly related to the presence of hydrocarbon saturations. Figure 1: Comparison analysis of water saturation (blue curve) and fluid bulk modulus (red curve) of well log data in the Malay basin. Black strips indicate the coal intervals. Figure 2: a) Inverted acoustic impedance extracted from the top reservoir horizon of a field in the Malay basin. b) The corresponding fluid bulk modulus values from fBMI. Novel/Additive Information The fBMI is a new four parameters linear amplitude-versus-offset inversion technique that provides quantitative fluid parameter directly related to fluid bulk modulus from seismic data. It is utilized as a tool for direct hydrocarbon prospect assessment to differentiate gas, oil, condensate and water.
Submitted Abstract Objectives/Scope The prediction of fluid parameter related to hydrocarbon presence using seismic data has often been limited by the performance of probability density function in estimating fluid properties from seismic inversion results. A novel fluid bulk modulus inversion (fBMI) is a pre-stack seismic inversion technique that has been developed to allow a direct estimation of pore fluid bulk modulus (Kf) from seismic data. Real data application in Malay basin showcases that Kf volume can be used to pinpoint areas with high probability of hydrocarbon presence. Methods, Procedures, Process The fluid term AVO reflectivity (Russell et al., 2011) is used as the basis of our formulation and has been extended to allow direct estimation of pore fluid bulk modulus, shearmodulus, porosity parameter and density through standard least-square inversion. The novel formulation is able to relax the dependency of fluid terms on the porosity. To demonstrate this, verifications were made against standard linear AVO approximations. Our observation shows that the young tertiary basins such as the Malay basin the fluid bulk modulus values have a big contrast between hydrocarbon saturated and water bearing reservoirs with a minimum of 60% ratio difference. The inverted fluid bulk modulus volume provides thus a direct assessment of areas with high probability of hydrocarbon saturation. Results, Observations, Conclusions In this paper, the fBMI technique is showcased on a field in the Malay basin. The outcome is demonstrated on a well panel analysis for four wells located across the study area (Figure 1). The inverted fluid bulk modulus extracted along a horizon representing the top of target reservoir is shown in Figure 2b. The blue color indicates high bulk modulus corresponds to water-bearing zone, while the yellow-red color range corresponding to low hydrocarbon-bearing zones. The areas of low fluid bulk modulus values at the north-western region are calibrated to known production zones in that region. fBMI shows areas that delineate high probability of hydrocarbon presence and provides a quantitative measure in terms of fluid parameter directly related to the presence of hydrocarbon saturations. Figure 1: Comparison analysis of water saturation (blue curve) and fluid bulk modulus (red curve) of well log data in the Malay basin. Black strips indicate the coal intervals. Figure 2: a) Inverted acoustic impedance extracted from the top reservoir horizon of a field in the Malay basin. b) The corresponding fluid bulk modulus values from fBMI. Novel/Additive Information The fBMI is a new four parameters linear amplitude-versus-offset inversion technique that provides quantitative fluid parameter directly related to fluid bulk modulus from seismic data. It is utilized as a tool for direct hydrocarbon prospect assessment to differentiate gas, oil, condensate and water.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.