Electronics for a thin bed array induction logging system
09720129 · 2017-08-01
Assignee
Inventors
- Gerald P. Miles (Sugar Land, TX, US)
- Cesar A. Sarria (Popayan, CO)
- Jairo A. Mena (San Juan de Pasto, CO)
- Mostafa M. Ebeid (Houston, TX, US)
- Tarek AbdelAziz (Katy, TX, US)
Cpc classification
H04L1/00
ELECTRICITY
E21B43/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
H04W4/00
ELECTRICITY
G01V3/38
PHYSICS
E21B15/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B6/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B44/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
E21B43/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B44/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
G01V3/38
PHYSICS
E21B15/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B6/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
A logging tool electronics system is disclosed with noise minimization features and pulse compression signal processing techniques to improve the signal-to-noise ratio of array induction logging tools. The borehole is radiated with a magnetic field produced by a configurable multi-frequency and/or multi-amplitude sine wave signal stimulus section driving a fully differential single transmitter coil. Received signals from multiple mutually balanced fully differential receiver arrays are processed by receiver signal chains using adaptive algorithms under firmware control. The received signals are used to determine the conductivity and resistivity of the formation surrounding the borehole.
Claims
1. Apparatus for measuring electrical conductivity of a rock formation surrounding a wellbore, comprising: a housing adapted for operation of electronic apparatus in a wellbore; means for generating a linear amplitude modulated multi-amplitude sine wave at variable amplitudes enveloped within pulse compressed time intervals and pulse widths, wherein a phase accuracy of electronic circuits for generating sine wave and pulse signals is designed for stability over a range of wellbore temperatures; a differentially driven transmitter coil disposed at a selected location on the housing connected for receiving and transmitting the signals from the first electronic circuits; a plurality of mutually balanced fully differential receiver coils disposed at selected locations on the housing, each coil connected to second digitally-controlled electronic circuits for amplifying and filtering signals from the receiver coils; a phase-sensitive detector and low pass filter for receiving signals from the second electronic circuits and the first electronic circuits and producing in-phase and quadrature out-of-phase signals as an analog signal; and an analog-to-digital converter to process the analog signal and produce a digital signal for transmission.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a current sensor in the first electronic circuits for sensing current to the transmitter coil and sending a signal to an electronic circuit, the electronic circuit including a phase-sensitive detector and low pass filter for receiving signals from the current sensor and providing an internal reference signal.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the receiver coils are accessed, calibrated and synchronized in parallel by a real-time processor that collects data, drives the tool and communicates with a telemetry system.
4. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein the receiver coils are accessed, calibrated and synchronized in parallel by a real-time processor in a selected cycle time.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising sensors under control of the controller.
6. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the phase-sensitive detector is based on square wave reference signals generated in the first digitally-controlled electronic circuits for generating sine wave and pulse signals.
7. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the apparatus includes five pairs of receivers, each receiver having main and bucking coils in series.
8. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the sine wave signals are generated at three amplitudes sequentially.
9. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a second transmitter coil, which may be in a separate tool.
10. Apparatus for measuring electrical conductivity of a rock formation surrounding a wellbore, comprising: a housing adapted for operation of electronic apparatus in a wellbore; means for generating a linear multi-frequency and amplitude modulated multi-frequency and multi-amplitude sine wave at variable frequencies and amplitudes enveloped within pulse compressed time intervals and pulse widths, wherein a phase accuracy of electronic circuits for generating sine wave and pulse signals is designed for stability over a range of wellbore temperatures; a differentially driven transmitter coil disposed at a selected location on the housing connected for receiving and transmitting the signals from the first electronic circuits; a plurality of mutually balanced fully differential receiver coils disposed at selected locations on the housing, each coil connected to second digitally-controlled electronic circuits for amplifying and filtering signals from the receiver coils; a phase-sensitive detector and low pass filter for receiving signals from the second electronic circuits and the first electronic circuits and producing in-phase and quadrature out-of-phase signals as an analog signal; and an analog-to-digital converter to process the analog signal and produce a digital signal for transmission.
11. The apparatus of claim 10 further comprising a current sensor in the first electronic circuits for sensing current to the transmitter coil and sending a signal to an electronic circuit, the electronic circuit including a phase-sensitive detector and low pass filter for receiving signals from the current sensor and providing an internal reference signal.
12. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein the receiver coils are accessed, calibrated and synchronized in parallel by a real-time processor that collects data, drives the tool and communicates with a telemetry system.
13. The apparatus of claim 12 wherein the receiver coils are accessed, calibrated and synchronized in parallel by a real-time processor in a selected cycle time.
14. The apparatus of claim 10 further comprising sensors under control of the controller.
15. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein the phase-sensitive detector is based on square wave reference signals generated in the first digitally-controlled electronic circuits for generating sine wave and pulse signals.
16. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein the apparatus includes five pairs of receivers, each receiver having main and bucking coils in series.
17. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein the same wave signals are generated at three amplitudes sequentially.
18. The apparatus of claim 10 further comprising a second transmitter coil, which may be in a separate tool.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING(S)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(6) The logging tool electronics disclosed herein is for an array induction tool composed of five receivers and one transmitter coil, but could be used for different topologies with a different number of transmitter/receiver coils. The receivers are preferably used in pairs, with one coil “bucking” the other (the coils are wound in opposite directions). The formation is radiated with the generated magnetic field produced by a highly-configurable digital waveform generator/transmitter driver/power amplifier section (the transmitter signal stimulus section), as illustrated in
(7) The pulse width, as illustrated
(8)
(9) B.sub.T=transmitter magnetic field,
(10) I.sub.T=transmitter current,
(11) I.sub.L=formation current “ground loop,”
(12) B.sub.L=formation current “ground loop” magnetic field,
(13) R=in-phase receiver DAQ (Digital Acquisition) voltage component due to formation conductivity, and
(14) X=quadrature phase receiver voltage component due to formation skin effect.
(15) The formation “ground loop” current flows around the induction tool due to coupling with the magnetic field generated by the transmitter. Formation conductivity is determined by the formation ground loop current, which generates a secondary magnetic field, that couples a signal into the receiver array that is an indicator of formation conductivity (or inversely, resistivity). Current flow in the transmitter coil establishes the primary (reference) magnetic field generated by the transmitter.
(16) The ratio of the sensed X-signal with respect to the R-signal at the receiver coil for a high performance auto-shielded induction tool can be around 10:1 in conductive formations and boreholes, so digitized R-signal (in phase) formation data is the signal of interest in low-conductivity formations, and quadrature X is used for calibration, skin effect correction and in special processing algorithms in high-conductivity environments.
(17) The transmitter signal stimulus section generates the magnetic field, driving controlled pulsing current at transmitter coil 13. The transmitter and selected capacitors create tuned tank 12, which functions according to the equation:
f=½π√LC
where f is the operation frequency, L the transmitter inductance, and C is the capacitance of a variable capacitor controlled by firmware. The electronics, switching frequency and capacitors are preferably selected every 10 mS, and the pulse frequency of operation is adjustable by firmware from 1K to 32 KHz.
(18) The receiver coil measurement signal chain DAQ system, (16, 17, 18, 19, 20, and 21) shown in
(19) All R and X signals from five receivers and calibration signals are collected in parallel in real time and may be used to correlate and calculate the real conductivity point-by-point up-hole (on the surface). Master processor 24 drives the tool operation and collection of data using a widely-used industrial network bus, discussed below.
(20) The tool is designed to operate over the industrial network bus, transmit data up to 1 M bit and support up to 32 nodes. This structure provides the flexibility to manage different kinds of induction tools, with multiple transmitters and multiple receivers, and be adjustable in frequency or capable of sweeping frequencies. In the design discussed here, the tool includes five receivers (five pairs of receivers, main (+) and bucking (−) in series at each spacing), one transmitter and it has three operating frequencies. This tool also supports the connection of several kinds of sensors and actuators, only needing an address and firmware to be accessed by the master processor. Each module connected to the data buss (MUX, RECEIVERS, CONTROL and TRANSMITTER) has reconfigurable, auto-calibration, and auto-test features that make for adjustable and adaptable electronics for several kinds of tools, topologies, and configurations.
(21) This multicore architecture was developed to minimize system stability issues, allowing every module enough autonomy to improve signal measurement dynamic range (for low conductivity formation by over-sampling the point in order to reduce the noise and get better data) and scale power consumption with sampling frequency, which is particularly important in newer tool designs using lower power supply voltage components. Recent developments in adaptive (reconfigurable) systems and the use of higher sampling rate ADC's are combined to provide this robust high-speed architecture not available in previous systems.
(22) These features enable electronics with the capability to avoid high and long transients in the stimulus section, permit sweeping in multiple frequencies (while keeping the same depth of investigation of previous systems) and the capability to use several receivers. Faster sampling allows the system to have higher resolution in thin bed high-definition logging.
(23) Generically, array induction tool measurement systems are performance limited due to the difficulty in configurability to a wide variety of analog circuit requirements. A highly-programmable analog system that can be configured for arbitrary analog functionality is quite valuable. This includes the tool's ability to sweep in frequency, switching capacitors at the transmitter, selecting frequency of operation at the receivers, reconfiguring resistors to adjust gain, and changing ADC resolution according to operation frequency and data from formation resistivity. Highly programmable analog systems can be used as the analog core of software defined measurement systems and also be valuable in fast prototyping tool applications. Since subsurface induction tools usually have various serial bus protocols for telemetry, a dependable system with flexibility to adapt easily to various protocols adds additional value to the system.
(24) Referring again to
(25) Signals from the formation are sensed by a mutually balanced, fully differential sensor-receiver coil system 16 and are amplified by an ultra-low noise preamplifier, which is coupled to selectable cut-off frequency bandpass filter 18, which is synchronized with the frequency of operation. The signals are then amplified again by amplifier 19 and passed to phase-sensitive detector 20 to lock-in to the frequency of interest using the square wave reference signals coming from generator 10. PSD 20 separates the auto induced signals X from the signals sensed from the formation R. Then, low pass filter 21 at the PSD output generates the DC voltage of both signals X and R. High sampling rate 24-bit ADC 22 with parallel channels then converts the signals to digital data. ADC 22 is controlled by high-speed microcontroller 23 and sends the data to master control 24 through high-speed communication data bus 25.
(26) Referring to
(27) Measured signals are sent to master control 24 through data bus 25 (
(28) Additional sensors 106 and actuators 107 may be included in the system. The sensors may be a mud sensor or accelerometer, for example. The actuator may operate a motor, for example. The system may include USB programming testing module 108 and extra memory slots 110. It is reconfigurable and flexible enough to drive multiple receivers, multiple transmitters, and multiple frequency induction systems. The flexible architecture of the system may use several communication protocols and internal buses, such as I2C, RS485, CAN, USB, and TCP/IP.
(29) The disclosed system may be driven and accessed through the I2C data bus by a telemetry system such as disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/267,313, filed Oct. 6, 2011, or through other commercial telemetry systems. The system preferably sends commands and receives raw data from all receivers every 50 mS in logging mode and every 500 mS in calibration mode, for all interpretation and calculation algorithms used up-hole in a surface logging unit.
(30)
(31) Although the present invention has been described with respect to specific details, it is not intended that such details should be regarded as limitations on the scope of the invention, except to the extent that they are included in the accompanying claims.