Abstract

Locating microseismic sources is critical to monitoring the hydraulic fractures that occur during fluid extraction/injection in unconventional oil/gas exploration, geothermal operations, and CO2 sequestration. Waveform-based seismic location methods can reliably and automatically image weak microseismic source locations without phase picking. Among them, the crosscorrelation migration (CCM) method can avoid excitation time scanning by generating virtual gathers. We have adopted a CCM location method based on the hybrid imaging condition (HIC). There are four main steps in the implementation of this method: (1) selection of receivers with good azimuthal coverage, (2) generation of virtual gathers by correlating the reference receiver with the rest of the receivers, (3) summation of back projections in the virtual gathers, and (4) multiplication of all summations. The CCM-HIC method is tested on synthetic and field data sets, and the results are compared with those obtained by the conventional summation imaging condition and multiplication imaging condition. The comparison results determine that CCM-HIC is sufficiently robust to obtain a source image with better stability and higher spatial resolution, despite the presence of strong noise.

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