Patent classifications
G01V2210/1299
METHOD TO DETERMINE DRILLING-INDUCED ROCK DAMAGE
Methods and systems for determining a drilling-induced rock damage map are disclosed. The method includes obtaining a sonic dataset, including sonic waveforms recorded at a plurality of source-receiver separations for a plurality of source positions along an axis of a wellbore. The method further includes determining a log of a first metric using the sonic dataset and determining a map of a second metric using the sonic dataset. The method still further includes determining the drilling-induced rock damage map based, at least in part, on the log of the first metric and the map of the second metric.
Low frequency DAS well interference evaluation
Methods and systems for assessing cross-well interference and/or optimizing hydrocarbon production from a reservoir by obtaining low frequency DAS and DTS data and pressure data from a monitor well, when both the monitor and production well are shut-in, and then variably opening the production well for production, and detecting the temperature and pressure fluctuations that indication cross-well interference, and localizing the interference along the well length based on the low frequency DAS data. This information can be used to optimize well placement, completion plans, fracturing plans, and ultimately optimize production from a given reservoir.
Microseismic Processing Using Fiber-Derived Flow Data
A method, downhole tool, and system, of which the method includes deploying a perforation charge into a wellbore, signaling the perforation charge to detonate, deploying a cable into the wellbore, determining a fluid flow rate at a predetermined location in the wellbore using the cable, and determining whether the perforation charge detonated at the predetermined location based on the fluid flow rate.
LEAK DETECTION VIA DOPPLER SHIFT DIFFERENCES IN MOVING HYDROPHONES
A leak-detecting assembly can include an array of hydrophones. The array can be moved within a hydrocarbon well. A variation in the Doppler shift caused by a stationary acoustic source (such as a leak) while the array moves towards and away from that source can be determined based on information from the array of hydrophones. The assembly can be associated with a passive system that captures acoustic signals directly from the source or leak and estimates a location of the source or leak based on measurement of Doppler shift in each receiver.
THROUGH TUBING CEMENT EVALUATION BASED ON CASING EXTENSIONAL WAVES
A method comprises conveying a downhole tool in a production tubing within a casing that is around a wall of a wellbore formed in a subsurface formation, wherein cement is placed in an annulus defined between the casing and the wall of the wellbore. The downhole tool includes at least one unipole receiver and a transmitter that comprises at least one of a unipole transmitter and a monopole transmitter. The transmitter and receiver are mounted on a rotatable portion of the downhole tool. The method includes performing the following operations at at least two azimuthal positions, emitting an acoustic transmission outward toward the cement and detecting an acoustic response that is in response to the acoustic transmission propagating through the production tubing and the casing and into the cement. The acoustic response includes casing extensional waves, casing non-extensional waves, and tubing waves. The method includes evaluating the cement based on the casing extensional waves.
NON-CONTACT SYSTEM AND METHODOLOGY FOR MEASURING A VELOCITY VECTOR
A technique facilitates monitoring of acoustic signals to measure a velocity vector of a borehole. Acoustic sensors are arranged in a desired acoustic sensor array and positioned along a body of a tool, e.g. a sonic logging tool. The acoustic sensor array is then positioned in fluid along a wall of a borehole formed in a subterranean formation. The acoustic sensors are used to collect acoustic signal data while the acoustic sensors are maintained in a non-contact position with respect to the wall of the borehole. The data may be processed to determine the desired velocity vector.
Acoustic logging apparatuses and methods
A transmitter for an acoustic logging tool includes an elongated housing, an acoustic energy generator, and a driver. The elongate housing defines a hollow interior and supports an acoustic energy generator, which includes four mutually orthogonally orientated bender bars that are electrically driveable to flex within the hollow interior in order to generate pressure-derived waves in a fluid surrounding the transmitter in use. The housing includes one or more transmissive windows via which flexing of the bender bars gives rise to propagation of one or more said waves in a said fluid. The driver electrically drives the bender bars to flex so as selectively to generate monopole, dipole, or quadrupole waves in a said fluid, with the poles of the dipole and quadrupole when generated selectively being aligned with normals to pairs of the bender bars or rotated 45° relative thereto.
Tube wave generation
A method to generate a tube wave in a tubular system involves reciprocating a plunger in a chamber system to alternatingly increase and decrease net volume, drawing fluid from and returning the fluid to a tubular system and into and from the chamber system, to generate a tube wave, and guiding the tube wave to the tubular system. Also, a tube wave generator-sensor system has a chamber system, a plunger, a driver to reciprocate the plunger within the chamber system to generate a tube wave, a flow passage to guide the tube wave into a tubular system, and a sensor to receive the tube wave signal and/or response from the tubular system. The method and system can work with or without a firing valve and or accumulator, without adding or subtracting fluid from the tubular system.
LOGGING SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR EVALUATION OF DOWNHOLE INSTALLATION
A downhole installation comprises: a first pipe layer 8, a second pipe layer 10 about the first pipe layer 8, an annulus 12 between the first pipe layer 8 and the second pipe layer, and a geological formation out-side of the second pipe layer 10. A logging system for evaluation of the downhole installation comprises: a logging tool 4 including an angled acoustic transmitter 20 for exciting a flexural wave in the first pipe layer 8, and three or more 10 angled acoustic receivers 14, 16, 38, 40, 42 spaced apart along the tool 4 such that, in use, the receivers are at different locations along the length of the pipe layers 8, 10, the receivers 4, 16, 38, 40, 42 each being for obtaining third interface echo data from the second pipe layer 10; and a processor arranged to process acoustic data from the receivers in order to: identify trends in the amplitude of the third interface echo as it propagates along the length of 1 the pipes, calculate an estimated exponential decay for the third interface echo when reinforcement from other acoustic energy is disregarded, use this estimation to predict if the material behind the second pipe layer 10 is fluid or solid, and analyse the third interface echo data in light of the determined material state in order to thereby evaluate material conditions in the annulus 12 outside the second pipe layer 10.
Depth-continuous estimation of the elastic tensor using single depth borehole sonic measurements
A method and system for estimating a full elastic tensor. The method may comprise taking a measurement for compressional wave sonic data and cross-dipole shear data with a sonic logging tool at a first location as cross-dipole data, processing the compressional wave sonic data to produce a compressional wave slowness (P), and processing the cross-dipole shear data to produce a fast horizontal polarized shear wave slowness (SH) and a slow quazi-vertical shear wave slowness (qSV) as a function of depth. The method may further comprise setting an initial guess for at least five constants of the full elastic tensor for Vertical Transversely Isotropy (VTI) symmetry, determining a modeled slowness surfaces from the full elastic tensor, and comparing the modeled slowness surfaces with measured values of the P, the SH, and the qSV. The method may be performed by a system comprising a sonic logging tool and an information handling system.