Abstract

Seismic methods are frequently used for the purpose of monitoring of time-lapse changes introduced by CO2 sequestration. Surface seismic is often considered as the main tool for monitoring. Vertical Seismic Profile (VSP) is occasionally applied as an auxiliary method. Standard VSP data processing workflow does not provide a quantitative estimate of the time-lapse changes in the physical properties. However, full waveform inversion (FWI) may be used for the purpose of quantitative interpretation. Its ability to employ the whole seismic wavefield (including transmitted, reflected and converted waves) for the purpose of building the models of physical properties can be considered one of its main advantages.We show that time-lapse elastic FWI of VSP data is capable of providing quantitative estimates of time-lapse changes in the medium. A feasibility study is carried out on 2D and 3D synthetic datasets created using full-earth models of the CO2CRC Otway CO2 sequestration site. The inversion workflow obtained from the feasibility study is successfully applied to a field single-offset time-lapse VSP dataset. As a result, FWI provides an image of the time-lapse changes introduced by the injection of supercritical CO2.

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