
Oil & Natural Gas Projects
Exploration and Production Technologies
Acoustical Imaging and Mechanical Properties of Soft Rock and Marine Sediments
DE-FC26-01BC15302
Program
This project was selected in response to DOE's Oil Exploration and Production
solicitation DE-PS26-01NT41048 (focus area: Critical Upstream Advanced Diagnostics
and Imaging Technology). The goal of the solicitation is to continue critical
upstream cross-cutting, interdisciplinary research for the development of advanced
and innovative technologies for imaging and quantifying reservoir rock and fluid
properties for improved oil recovery.
Project Goal
The focus of this project was to provide research to allow an expansion of time-lapse
seismic technologies to image damage occurring in oil and gas reservoirs. The
study attempted to provide an answer to two questions: 1) can 3-D seismic imaging
be used to define and outline regions of rock that are
susceptible to drilling damage and production damage prior to drilling a well;
and 2) to track, after production has started (via time lapse 4-D seismic imaging)
the development of any rock damage such as compaction and subsidence.
Performer
University of Oklahoma
Norman, OK
Project Results
The project determined that field seismic imaging of rocks can be utilized to
highlight regions of rocks that have the potential for generating damage during
drilling and for long-term tracking of mechanical damage during the extraction
of petroleum reserves.
The project generated a basic database on acoustic (seismic) properties of
weak rocks and soft sediments when subjected to high stresses. Perhaps the most
important advance in the project was a demonstration that rock damage can be
time-lapse imaged as it develops within a highly stressed region of rock. This
laboratory experiment suggests that damage within a petroleum reservoir could
be imaged as well by repeating 3-D seismic surveys over the life of the reservoir
(i.e., 4-D imaging).
Benefits
The easy to drill and produce reservoirs already have been depleted during past
oil and gas production operations. This leaves much of the existing reserves
in more-expensive, problematic reservoirs. Many of these reservoirs are in soft
rock or unconsolidated sands that are mechanically unstable and generate costly
drilling and production problems such as casing failures, reservoir compaction,
and sand production. Many of these problems can be mitigated if the operators
know beforehand that a problem may occur or is beginning to develop within an
existing field. If successfully applied, this seismic technology could save
billions of dollars by alerting operators to potential or actually occurring
rock damage. It may make many problematic (e.g, unpredictable and unstable)
reservoirs more economic to drill and produce.
Background
Damage to weakly cemented, unconsolidated sands or soft rocks (like chalk) during
the production and drilling of reservoirs is a costly problem for the oil and
gas industry. For example, the unexpected compaction (and its resultant damage)
in the Ekofisk chalk resulted in over $1 billion in remedial work being applied
to production facilities overlying the reservoir. Reservoir compaction can also
result in casing failures, loss of reservoir permeability, and damage to surface
production facilities. Another example of the problem generated by drilling
unconsolidated sands is the problem of shallow water flows. Such flows occur
at shallow depths below the seafloor (less than 2,000 feet) but in deep water
(2,000 - 4,000 feet). These flows occur when the unconsolidated sands suddenly
flow up the annulus of the borehole and flow onto the seabed. The flow can cause
washouts and loss of the supporting surface casing. For example, the damage
to the Ursa development project on Mississippi Canyon Block 810 resulted in
the loss of $150 million for the partners in the project.
Project Summary
The research during this project concentrated on developing a correlation between
rock deformation mechanisms and their acoustic velocity signatures. Among the
milestones:
- The experiments on unconsolidated sands indicated that shear wave velocities
sharply decrease and Vp/Vs ratios markedly increase during liquefaction of
sand at high pressure in undrained triaxial experiments and during plasticity
of sand in drained triaxial experiments.
- Experiments were conducted to determine the acoustic emission signature
of deforming high- porosity rocks (in comparison to their low-porosity, high-strength
counterparts). The results were highly variable-typically sands and sandstones
generate much acoustic emission during damage and high-porosity, soft chalks
did not.
- The project demonstrated that the elastic and poroelastic moduli are strongly
affected by applied stress. In fact, the rock can develop a significant stress-induced
anisotropy-a factor extremely important to geophysicists processing seismic
data.
- Research showed that damaged regions of rock could be seismic-tomographically
imaged as the damage is occurring. The development of a growing, propagating
shear fracture and its associated damage halo was successfully imaged during
a triaxial compression experiment.
Current Status
The project has led to the development of a spin-off company called Rock Dynamics
(located in Norman, OK). The company was set up to directly facilitate technology
transfer of the concepts developed in this DOE project to the oil and gas industry.
The company has been involved in 1) transferring the new
laboratory technologies developed in this project to several oil and gas company
R&D facilities, 2) refining the technology in laboratory acoustic tomographic
imaging systems for eventual marketing to geotechnical testing laboratories
and the oil and gas R&D facilities, 3) continuing research into acoustic
and seismic imaging of rock damage, and 4) presentation of scientific results
to various R&D laboratories. Research also continues in the PoroMechanics
Institute at the University of Oklahoma in the Rock Mechanics Consortium of
Oil and Gas Companies.
Publications
Scott, T.E., and Abousleiman, Y., Acoustical Imaging and Mechanical Properties
of Soft Rock and Marine Sediments, DOE Final Technical Report #15302, DOE Award
Number: DE-FC26-01BC15302, 2004.
Scott, T.E., and Abousleiman, Y., A determination of the stress-induced dynamic
moduli of a porous medium subjected to various deformational pathways., Proceedings
from the Second Biot Conference on Poromechanics, pp. 795-799, 2002
Scott, T.E., and Abousleiman, Y., An experimental method for measuring anisotropic
poroelastic Biot's effective stress parameters from acoustic wave propagation,
Proceedings from the Second Biot Conference on Poromechanics, pp. 801-806, 2002
Scott, T.E. and Abousleiman, Y., Ultrasonic imaging of a shear failure during
triaxial testing, Proceedings from the North American Symposium on Rock Mechanics
(Alaska Rocks), 2005.
Scott, T.E. and Abousleiman, Y., Acoustic measurements of the anisotropy of
dynamic elastic and poromechanics moduli under different stress paths, to be
published in the September 2005 issue of the Journal of Engineering Mechanics,
2005.
Project Start: January 2, 2002
Project End: December 30, 2003
Anticipated DOE Contribution: $289,887
Performer Contribution: $78,218 (21% of total)
Contact Information
NETL - Virginia Weyland (virginia.weyland@netl.doe.gov or 918-699-2041)
U. of Oklahoma - Thurman Scott (gene@rmg.ou.edu or 405-325-2900)
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