Abstract
In November and December 1995, the Reservoir Characterization Project (RCP) at the Colorado School of Mines acquired time-lapse multicomponent 3D surveys over the Central Vacuum Unit of Vacuum Field in Lea County, New Mexico. Two surveys were acquired — one before and one after the injection of 50 MMscf CO2 through a single wellbore into the San Andres Reservoir. The project determined that repeated multicomponent seismic surveys at the earth's surface can detect changes in bulk rock properties due to variations in reservoir pressures and fluid properties. Interpretation of the dynamic seismic response due to reservoir production processes over time provides an image of the relative permeability structure of the reservoir. Time-lapse multicomponent data were acquired using three-component geophones and vertically and horizontally actuated vibrator sources at the surface. A data processing flow was developed for time-lapse multicomponent 3D surveys. It uses surface-consistent processing algorithms and the source and receiver redundancy between initial and repeat surveys to derive surface-consistent corrections. Differences in S-wave polarization are measured between the initial and repeat surveys. S-wave data show sensitivity (through birefringence) to anisotropy caused by the orientation of fractures and low-aspect-ratio pore structure in a nonuniform stress field. The direction of fast S-wave polarization can be related to the direction of maximum horizontal stress and preferential permeability. Pore-pressure variations alter the effective stress. This varies the direction and intensity of open fractures and low-aspect-ratio pore structure within the current permeability structure of the reservoir, causing detectable changes in S-wave anisotropy. Anomalies in S-wave anisotropy, interpreted from time-lapse multicomponent 3D data, in conjunction with reservoir production data, are consistent with the fluid composition and pore-pressure changes associated with the CO2 injection program and reservoir processes in the survey area. Applications include monitoring hydrocarbon enhanced oil recovery; carbon capture, utilization, and storage; hydraulic stimulation; induced seismicity; and geothermal investigations.
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