Estimation of rock physics properties via full waveform inversion of vertical seismic profile data recorded by accelerometer and fibre-optic sensors

Author:

Hu Qi1ORCID,Eaid Matthew V2,Innanen Kristopher A1,Keating Scott D3,Cai Xiaohui1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geoscience , University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4 , Canada

2. Chevron Technical Center, Seismic Imaging Research , Houston TX 77002 , USA

3. Department of Earth Sciences , ETH Zurich, Sonneggstrasse 5, CH-8092 Zurich , Switzerland

Abstract

SUMMARY Combining elastic full waveform inversion (FWI) with rock physics holds promise for expanding the application of FWI beyond seismic imaging to predicting and monitoring reservoir properties. Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS), a rapidly developing seismic acquisition technology, is being explored for its potential in supporting FWI applications. In this study, we implement a sequential inversion scheme that integrates elastic FWI and Bayesian rock physics inversion, using a vertical seismic profile (VSP) data set acquired with accelerometer and collocated DAS fibre at the Carbon Management Canada’s Newell County Facility. Our aim is to establish a baseline model of porosity and lithology parameters to support later monitoring of CO2 storage. Key strategies include an effective source approach for addressing near-surface complications, a modelling strategy to simulate DAS data comparable to field data, and a Gaussian mixture approach to capture the bimodality of rock properties. We conduct FWI tests on accelerometer, DAS, and combined accelerometer-DAS data. While our inversion results accurately reproduce either data set, the elastic models inverted from accelerometer data outperform the other two in matching well logs and identifying the target reservoir. We attribute this outcome to the limited complementarity of DAS data with accelerometer data in our experiment, along with the limitations imposed by single-component measurements on DAS. The porosity and lithology models predicted from accelerometer-derived elastic models are reasonably accurate at the well location and exhibit geologically meaningful spatial distribution.

Funder

NSERC

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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