The Asperity-deformation Model Improvements and Its Applications to Velocity Inversion

Quantifying the influence of pressure on the effective elastic rock properties is important for applications in rock physics and reservoir characterization. Here I investigate the relationship between effective pressure and seismic velocities by performing inversion on the laboratory-measured data f...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bui, Hoa Q.
Other Authors: Gibson, Richard L.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2010
Subjects:
ADM
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-425
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-425
id ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2009-05-425
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2009-05-4252013-01-08T10:39:11ZThe Asperity-deformation Model Improvements and Its Applications to Velocity InversionBui, Hoa Q.ADMAsperity-Deformationbed-of-nailsseismic velocitynonlinear inversionpressure effectsnonlinear elasticfracturefractured reservoirrock physicsreservoir characterizationrigid-hostcompliant-hostnonlinear deformationhost-rock pressure dependenceasperity in contactvisco-elasticityQuantifying the influence of pressure on the effective elastic rock properties is important for applications in rock physics and reservoir characterization. Here I investigate the relationship between effective pressure and seismic velocities by performing inversion on the laboratory-measured data from a suite of clastic, carbonate and igneous rocks, using different analytic and discrete inversion schemes. I explore the utility of a physical model that models a natural fracture as supported by asperities of varying heights, when an effective pressure deforms the tallest asperities, bringing the shorter ones into contact while increasing the overall fracture stiffness. Thus, the model is known as the ?asperity-deformation? (ADM) or ?bed-of-nails? (BNM) model. Existing analytic solutions include one that assumes the host rock is infinitely more rigid than the fractures, and one that takes the host-rock compliance into account. Inversion results indicate that although both solutions can fit the data to within first-order approximation, some systematic misfits exist as a result of using the rigid-host solution, whereas compliant-host inversion returns smaller and random misfits, yet out-of-range parameter estimates. These problems indicate the effects of nonlinear elastic deformation whose degree varies from rock to rock. Consequently, I extend the model to allow for the pressure dependence of the host rock, thereby physically interpreting the nonlinear behaviors of deformation. Furthermore, I apply a discrete grid-search inversion scheme that generalizes the distribution of asperity heights, thus accurately reproduces velocity profiles, significantly improves the fit and helps to visualize the distribution of asperities. I compare the analytic and numerical asperity-deformation models with the existing physical model of elliptical ?pennyshape? cracks with a pore-aspect-ratio (PAR) spectrum in terms of physical meaning and data-fitting ability. The comparison results provide a link and demonstrate the consistency between the use of the two physical models, making a better understanding of the microstructure as well as the contact mechanism and physical behaviors of rocks under pressure. ADM-based solutions, therefore, have the potential to facilitate modeling and interpretation of applications such as time-lapse seismic investigations of fractured reservoirs.Gibson, Richard L.2010-01-16T00:06:23Z2010-01-16T00:06:23Z2009-052010-01-16T00:06:23ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-425http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-425en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic ADM
Asperity-Deformation
bed-of-nails
seismic velocity
nonlinear inversion
pressure effects
nonlinear elastic
fracture
fractured reservoir
rock physics
reservoir characterization
rigid-host
compliant-host
nonlinear deformation
host-rock pressure dependence
asperity in contact
visco-elasticity
spellingShingle ADM
Asperity-Deformation
bed-of-nails
seismic velocity
nonlinear inversion
pressure effects
nonlinear elastic
fracture
fractured reservoir
rock physics
reservoir characterization
rigid-host
compliant-host
nonlinear deformation
host-rock pressure dependence
asperity in contact
visco-elasticity
Bui, Hoa Q.
The Asperity-deformation Model Improvements and Its Applications to Velocity Inversion
description Quantifying the influence of pressure on the effective elastic rock properties is important for applications in rock physics and reservoir characterization. Here I investigate the relationship between effective pressure and seismic velocities by performing inversion on the laboratory-measured data from a suite of clastic, carbonate and igneous rocks, using different analytic and discrete inversion schemes. I explore the utility of a physical model that models a natural fracture as supported by asperities of varying heights, when an effective pressure deforms the tallest asperities, bringing the shorter ones into contact while increasing the overall fracture stiffness. Thus, the model is known as the ?asperity-deformation? (ADM) or ?bed-of-nails? (BNM) model. Existing analytic solutions include one that assumes the host rock is infinitely more rigid than the fractures, and one that takes the host-rock compliance into account. Inversion results indicate that although both solutions can fit the data to within first-order approximation, some systematic misfits exist as a result of using the rigid-host solution, whereas compliant-host inversion returns smaller and random misfits, yet out-of-range parameter estimates. These problems indicate the effects of nonlinear elastic deformation whose degree varies from rock to rock. Consequently, I extend the model to allow for the pressure dependence of the host rock, thereby physically interpreting the nonlinear behaviors of deformation. Furthermore, I apply a discrete grid-search inversion scheme that generalizes the distribution of asperity heights, thus accurately reproduces velocity profiles, significantly improves the fit and helps to visualize the distribution of asperities. I compare the analytic and numerical asperity-deformation models with the existing physical model of elliptical ?pennyshape? cracks with a pore-aspect-ratio (PAR) spectrum in terms of physical meaning and data-fitting ability. The comparison results provide a link and demonstrate the consistency between the use of the two physical models, making a better understanding of the microstructure as well as the contact mechanism and physical behaviors of rocks under pressure. ADM-based solutions, therefore, have the potential to facilitate modeling and interpretation of applications such as time-lapse seismic investigations of fractured reservoirs.
author2 Gibson, Richard L.
author_facet Gibson, Richard L.
Bui, Hoa Q.
author Bui, Hoa Q.
author_sort Bui, Hoa Q.
title The Asperity-deformation Model Improvements and Its Applications to Velocity Inversion
title_short The Asperity-deformation Model Improvements and Its Applications to Velocity Inversion
title_full The Asperity-deformation Model Improvements and Its Applications to Velocity Inversion
title_fullStr The Asperity-deformation Model Improvements and Its Applications to Velocity Inversion
title_full_unstemmed The Asperity-deformation Model Improvements and Its Applications to Velocity Inversion
title_sort asperity-deformation model improvements and its applications to velocity inversion
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-425
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-425
work_keys_str_mv AT buihoaq theasperitydeformationmodelimprovementsanditsapplicationstovelocityinversion
AT buihoaq asperitydeformationmodelimprovementsanditsapplicationstovelocityinversion
_version_ 1716503889844371456