Seismic monitoring of a CO2 flood in a carbonate reservoir: A rock physics study
暂无分享,去创建一个
A carbon dioxide (CO2) injection pilot project is underway in Section 205 of the McElroy field, West Texas. High‐resolution crosswell seismic imaging surveys were conducted before and after CO2 flooding to monitor the CO2 flood process and map the flooded zones. The velocity changes observed by these time‐lapse surveys are typically on the order of −6%, with maximum values on the order of −10% in the vicinity of the injection well. These values generally agree with laboratory measurements if the effects of changing pore pressure are included. The observed dramatic compressional (VP) and shear (VS) velocity changes are considerably greater than we had initially predicted using the Gassmann (1951) fluid substitution analysis (Nolen‐Hoeksema et al., 1995) because we had assumed reservoir pressure would not change from survey to survey. However, the post‐CO2 reservoir pore fluid pressure was substantially higher than the original pore pressure. In addition, our original petrophysical data for dry and brine‐sa...
[1] Zhijing Wang,et al. Seismic properties of pore fluids , 1992 .
[2] J. Harris,et al. High-resolution crosswell imaging of a West Texas carbonate reservoir; Part 5, Core analysis , 1995 .
[3] James W. Rector,et al. High‐resolution crosswell imaging of a west Texas carbonate reservoir: Part 1—Project summary and interpretation , 1995 .
[4] G. Sedgwick,et al. Seismic Velocities In Carbonate Rocks , 1991 .