2017
DOI: 10.1002/2017jb014303
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Mobility Effect on Poroelastic Seismic Signatures in Partially Saturated Rocks With Applications in Time‐Lapse Monitoring of a Heavy Oil Reservoir

Abstract: Conventional seismic analysis in partially saturated rocks normally lays emphasis on estimating pore fluid content and saturation, typically ignoring the effect of mobility, which decides the ability of fluids moving in the porous rocks. Deformation resulting from a seismic wave in heterogeneous partially saturated media can cause pore fluid pressure relaxation at mesoscopic scale, thereby making the fluid mobility inherently associated with poroelastic reflectivity. For two typical gas‐brine reservoir models,… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…For partially saturated rocks, the mesoscopic fluid pressure diffusion takes place between the two immiscible fluids (water and air) due to their high compressibility contrast (Johnson, 2001; Pride et al, 2004; White, 1975; Zhao et al, 2017). Given the necessary physical parameters of tight sandstone as listed in Table 1, we employ the classical White model (Dutta & Odé, 1979a, 1979b; White, 1975) to compute the attenuation signatures of tight sandstone at varying levels of water saturation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For partially saturated rocks, the mesoscopic fluid pressure diffusion takes place between the two immiscible fluids (water and air) due to their high compressibility contrast (Johnson, 2001; Pride et al, 2004; White, 1975; Zhao et al, 2017). Given the necessary physical parameters of tight sandstone as listed in Table 1, we employ the classical White model (Dutta & Odé, 1979a, 1979b; White, 1975) to compute the attenuation signatures of tight sandstone at varying levels of water saturation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, the peak frequency for measured attenuation does not show a clear dependent relationship with water saturation. Nevertheless, the modelling peak frequency of attenuation shifts to lower frequency band, which is caused by the increase in the characteristic length of the heterogeneity scale related to saturated water with the highest viscosity (three‐order higher than air) (Dutta and Seriff, 1979; Zhao et al ., 2017b). The discrepancy between modelling and experimental results is possibly due to the coupled effect of microscopic squirt flow and mesoscopic flow between two immiscible fluids in realistically heterogeneous and partially saturated media.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is interesting to note that in addition to many known heterogeneities, such as fluid patches, pore fabric, or rock frame heterogeneity, that generate nonuniform pore pressure (Ba et al, ; Pride et al, ; Sun et al, ; Zhang et al, ; Zhao et al, ), elastic interactions associated with the spatial distribution of ellipsoidal pores might represent another type of mechanism giving rise to heterogeneous pore pressure. Moreover, it is important to emphasize that to be consistent with the physical model to be investigated here, the fluid pressure distribution obtained in Figure is associated with a nonporous background, where only one set of isolated and vertically aligned ellipsoidal pores is included.…”
Section: Numerical Simulation Of Elastic Interactions Effects On Porementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ba et al, 2016;Pride et al, 2004;Sun et al, 2015;Zhang et al, 2019;Zhao et al, 2017), elastic interactions associated with the spatial…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%