Abstract

Summary Formation elastic properties near a borehole may be altered from their original state due to the stress concentration around the borehole. This could lead to a biased estimation of formation elastic properties measured from sonic logging data. To study the effect of stress concentration around a borehole on sonic logging, we first use an iterative approach, which combines a rock physics model and a finite-element method, to calculate the stress-dependent elastic properties of the rock around a borehole when it is subjected to an anisotropic stress loading. Then we use the anisotropic elastic model obtained from the first step and a finite-difference method to simulate the acoustic response in a borehole. Our numerical results are consistent with published laboratory measurements of the azimuthal velocity variations caused by borehole stress concentration. Both numerical and experimental results show that the variation of P-wave velocity versus azimuth has broad maxima and cusped minima, which is different from the presumed cosine behavior. This is caused by the preference of the wavefield to propagate through a higher velocity region.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call