Fundamentals of Seismic Acquisition and Processing: Overall Learning Objectives
Fundamentals of Seismic Acquisition and Processing: Overall Learning Objectives
Academics
Stanford Geophysics Degrees
Boston College Prof. Geophysics
University of Oklahoma Adjunct Research Associate
2
Introduction
Fundamentals of Seismic
Acquisition and Processing
Course Overview
3
Introduction
Learning Methodologies
• Modular
• Why modules are important
• Powerpoints, short problems, “workshops”,
flip chart
• Interactive
– Discussion questions
– Share experiences/problems
– Learn from each other
• Ask Questions
• Daily feedback
4
Introduction
Network of Excellence in Training
www.nexttraining.ie
Heriot-Watt University
Distance Learning in Petroleum
Engineering Center of Excellence
5
Introduction
Module 1
Introduction
Learning objectives
Awareness Level:
• Various geophysical methods
• Seismic trace, record, section, cube
• History of seismic method
• Seismic reflection basics
• Role of seismic in reservoir life cycle
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Introduction Geophysical Surveying Methods
Most geophysical surveying methods can be used either on land or offshore.
Each of these methods measures a parameter that relates to a physical property
of the subsurface. List of different methods, the parameters they measure, and
the related rock properties are indicated in the table 1
Table 1 Geophysical Surveying Methods
PHYSICAL PROPERTY MEASURED OR
METHOD MEASURED PARAMETER
DERIVED
SEISMIC TRAVEL TIME AND AMPLITUDE OR ELASTIC MODULI, PROPAGATION
REFLECTED/REFRACTED SEISMIC VELOCITY, DENSITY?
WAVES
GRAVITY SPATIAL VARIATIONS IN THE STRENGTH DENSITY
OF THE EARTH’S GRAVITATIONAL FIELD
– Travel times
– Amplitudes
– Attributes
– Tied to subsurface control
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Introduction
Seismic Interpretation
3D Seismic Cube
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Introduction
What Do We Desire?
S R
• Structure
• Lithology
• Pore fluid
• Fractures
• Pressure
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Introduction Predict and Characterize
Subsurface Reservoirs
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Introduction
Seismic Interpretation
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Introduction
Today’s Major Problems
• Backscattered noise
• Complex near-surface
• Multiples
• Anisotropy
• Parameters for model driven processing
– Velocity
–Q
– Anisotropy
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Introduction
The Seismic Experiment
S R
Measure:
• Travel time
• Amplitude
• Particle motion
Infer:
• Velocity
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Introduction
Basic Seismic Measurements
Particle Particle
Pressure
Velocity Displacement
Time
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Introduction
The Seismic Trace
The basic unit of seismic data
- Amplitude
0 +
Travel Time
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Introduction
Recording Seismic Data
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Introduction
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Introduction Scales of Geological Reservoir
Heterogeneity
Interwell
Well Area Well
Determined
Field Wide
From Well Logs,
Seismic Lines, 100's
Statistical m
Modeling,
etc.
1-10 km
Interwell
Reservoir 10's
Sandstone m
100's m
1-10's
Well-Bore
10-100's
m
10-100's mm
mm
Unaided Eye
Hand Lens or
Petrographic or Binocular Microscope
Scanning Electron
Microscope (modified from Weber, 1986)
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Introduction
Subsurface Reservoirs
• Can seismic predict some key characteristics and properties?
- Depth
- Geologic Setting - Origin of Rocks/Fluids
- Geologic Structure
- Geometry – thickness, areal extent, volume, seals
- Rock Type
- Heterogeneity – Layering, Faults/Fractures, Compartments
- Porosity
- Fluid Content/Distribution
- Pressure Distribution
- Mechanical Strength
- Permeability
- Drive Mechanisms
- Temperature
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Introduction Earth Properties
as seen by seismic waves
• Inhomogeneous
• Attenuative
• Anisotropic
• Porous
• Fluid filled
22
Introduction
Characteristics of Seismic Data
• Band Limited
– Low End 5-10 Hz
– High End 50-100 Hz
• Spatial Coverage Redundant yet Incomplete
• Large Data Volumes (up to 10’s of terabytes)
– 2000-4000 time samples per trace
– Record length 6-12 sec
– 100,000 - 1,000,000 spatial locations
– 12-1000 fold redundancy
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Introduction
Exploration Seismic
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Introduction Stacking A CMP (Common Midpoint)
Gather
S5 S4 S3 S2 S1 C M P R1 R2 R3 R4 R5
Subsurface
Reflector
Subsurface Coverage
Continuous or Single-Fold Subsurface Coverage
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Introduction
Seismic Reflection Exploration Overview
– Move-up of 1/12 spread gives 6-fold, etc S1 = 1st Source S2 = 2nd Source
M = Midpoint R1 = 1st Receiver
R2 = 2nd Receiver
CMP Shooting.
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Introduction
Seismic Reflection Exploration Overview
Multi-fold Coverage
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Introduction Stacked Trace After
Geometry Correction
CMP
0
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Introduction Seismic Trace, Record and Section
• A seismic survey generates a large number of shot records to cover the area under study.
Many steps of processing are applied to the data to enhance the signal, to minimize noise,
and to increase resolution. All the traces corresponding to a surface midpoint are combined
into a single trace, called a common-mid-point stack.
• Seismic section
When processing is complete, all the common-depth-point stacks are displayed side by side
to make a seismic section, which is the final output of a 2D seismic survey.
A Seismic Section
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Introduction
3-D Seismic
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Introduction
3-D Prospect Layout Example
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Introduction Major Steps in Seismic Reflection
Exploration
• Pre-planning
• Data Acquisition
• Data Processing
• Interpretation
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Introduction
Pre-Planning
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Introduction
Geologic Objective
• Regional dip
• Modeling
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Introduction
Acquisition Parameters
Maximize
Production
Accelerate Maximize
+ Production Recovery
Cash Flow
Time
Minimize Defer
Opex Abandonment
Minimize
- Capex
Optimized Development Traditional Development
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Introduction
Seismic in the Reservoir Cycle
• Appraisal – 3-D
• Management – 4D/Time-lapse
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Introduction
Discussion
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Introduction
Prediction Description
Geophysics
Petrophysics Geology
Reservoir
Drilling Computing
Performance Characterization
Engineering
Optimization
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Introduction
Seismic Today
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Introduction
45
Introduction
A Technical Vision
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Introduction Seismic to Reservoir Transformation
Amoco, RIP - 1997
Idealized Multidimensional Process
Vector
Seismic Geological /
Data Rock Physics
Coherency AVO Constraints
P S
Detection
Rates
Rock / Fluid Multidimensional Multiple AI
Visualization Reservoir Volumes
Physics Modeling Depth Attribute Geostatistical Models Uncertainty
Calibration Images Volumes Classification Interpretations
Angle
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Introduction
Summary
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