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Electrode Arrays: 4.6 DC Resistivity and IP Field Systems, Data Processing and Interpretation

This document discusses resistivity surveying techniques including: 1) Common electrode array configurations used in resistivity surveys like pole-pole, pole-dipole, Wenner, Schlumberger, and dipole-dipole arrays. 2) Formulas for calculating apparent resistivity for each array type based on voltage, current, and electrode spacing. 3) Conventions for plotting apparent resistivity data, including log-log plots vs. electrode spacing for sounding curves and pseudo-section maps with contour lines for multi-electrode profiling surveys.

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Julio Samamé
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views8 pages

Electrode Arrays: 4.6 DC Resistivity and IP Field Systems, Data Processing and Interpretation

This document discusses resistivity surveying techniques including: 1) Common electrode array configurations used in resistivity surveys like pole-pole, pole-dipole, Wenner, Schlumberger, and dipole-dipole arrays. 2) Formulas for calculating apparent resistivity for each array type based on voltage, current, and electrode spacing. 3) Conventions for plotting apparent resistivity data, including log-log plots vs. electrode spacing for sounding curves and pseudo-section maps with contour lines for multi-electrode profiling surveys.

Uploaded by

Julio Samamé
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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4.

6 DC resistivity and IP field systems, data processing and


interpretation

 Electrode arrays
 Response of a layered earth
 The anisotropic half space
 Response of simple inhomogeneities
 Solutions for arbitrary conductivity distribution
 Practical considerations

Electrode arrays

a) Pole-Pole
b) Pole-Dipole
c) Wenner
d) Schlumberger
e) Dipole-Dipole
f) Data plotting for the pole-pole, pole-dipole and dipole-dipole arrays

All the arrays of electrodes used to obtain the apparent resistivity are
variants of the four-electrode scheme that was introduced in section 4.3. All the
arrays are basically superpositions of the fundamental equation for the potential
from a current source with appropriate sign for the current. The formulas for
apparent resistivity are a product of the impedance V/I (Ohms) and a geometric
factor with the units of length (meters). To investigate the resistivity distribution
with depth, called a sounding, the arrays are expanded about a center point and the

1
apparent resistivities are plotted vs. spacing usually on a log-log plot. In the more
general case the apparent resistivities are plotted as a function of array spacing and
lateral position using plotting conventions that have become accepted for each type
of array.

a) Pole-Pole

The simplest array is one in which one of the current electrodes and one of
the potential electrodes are placed so far away that they can be considered at
infinity. This configuration with its formula for apparent resistivity is shown
below.

V
A  2 a
I

This array can actually be achieved for surveys of small overall dimension when it
is possible to put the distant electrodes some practical distance away. For a survey
in an area of a few square meters “infinity” can be on the order of a hundred
meters. Pole-pole sounding data is plotted as apparent resistivity vs. a.

2
b) Pole-Dipole

If only one of the current electrodes is placed at “infinity” the configuration


and the apparent resistivity are as shown:

b ( a  b) V
 A  2
a I

This array is used frequently in resistivity surveying and the spacings are usually
described, and taken, in integer multiples of the voltage electrode spacing b. The
standard nomenclature is to call the potential electrode spacing a so the
configuration and apparent resistivity become:
V
 A  2 a n  n  1 .
I

Pole-dipole sounding data are plotted as apparent resistivity vs. a.

c) Wenner

The Wenner array is now seen to be a simple variant of the pole-dipole in


which the distant pole at infinity is brought in and all the electrodes are given the
same spacing, a, as seen in the following configuration

3
V
 A  2 a
I

The Wenner array is normally used for sounding and the apparent resistivities are
plotted vs. a on a log-log plot such as is shown in Figure 4.6.1.

d) Schlumberger

One of the first arrays used in the 1920’s and still popular today is the
Schlumberger array shown below with its formula for apparent resistivity. It is
another variant of the pole-dipole, again with the second current electrode placed
symmetrically opposite the first. The voltage difference is consequently doubled
and so the apparent resistivity is the same as that for the general pole-dipole with a
factor of 1/2 in the geometric factor. In a Schlumberger sounding the voltage
electrodes are usually kept small and fixed while only the b spacing is changed.

4
V b b  a  V b 2
A     if a  b
I a I a

[Note that if a is small compared to b, V/a ~ E the electric field. The electric field
from an electrode is   r  I 2r 2 and since there are two electrodes the total
E 2
electric field becomes = I r 2 and so  A  b .]
I

Further, it is conventional to consider the spacing to be the distance from the


center of the array to the outermost electrodes, i.e. AB/2. In this case b in the above
expressions becomes AB/2 – a/2. If a << AB/2 the above formulas for A are
unchanged.

Data from a Schlumberger sounding is plotted vs. spacing in the same


manner as the Wenner data of Figure 4.6.2.

e) Dipole-Dipole

The dipole-dipole array is logistically the most convenient in the field,


especially for large spacings. All the other arrays require significant lengths of wire
to connect the power supply and voltmeter to their respective electrodes and these
wires must be moved for every change in spacing as the array is either expanded
for a sounding or moved along a line. The convention for the dipole-dipole array
shown below is that current and voltage spacing is the same, a, and the spacing
between them is an integer multiple of a.

5
The apparent resistivity is given by:
V
A   a n n  1n  2 .
I

f) Data plotting for the pole-pole, pole-dipole and dipole-dipole arrays

The pole-pole, pole-dipole and dipole-dipole arrays are normally used in


profiling mode to map lateral as well as depth variations in resistivity. The plotting
convention is to plot the values of apparent resistivity at the intersection point of
two 45 lines descending from the current pole or dipole and from the voltage pole
or dipole. This convention is illustrated for each of the arrays in Figure 4.6.3. The
resulting “maps” of apparent resistivity are contoured at constant (usually
logarithmic) intervals. The contoured sections are called “pseudo sections” because
they look somewhat like resistivity cross-sections of the ground but they are not –
they are simply a graphical representation of the data. The vertical scale is not
depth but some function of the array spacing. For some geological models the
pseudo sections do have an intuitive relationship to the actual section but mostly
they do not. For a layered earth the contours are horizontal and rise and fall in
value in the same sense as the actual resistivity, but for the case of a vertical
contact between dissimilar resistivities the pseudo-section is a complex map with

6
no direct relationship to the actual model. The example below shows dipole-dipole
pseudo-sections for both layered earth and vertical contact models.

Two-layer model

Dipole-dipole pseudo-section of the two-layer model

7
Vertical contact model

Dipole-dipole pseudo-section of the vertical contact model

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