Abstract

As an environmentally friendly and high-calorific natural gas, coalbed methane (CBM) has become one of the world’s most crucial unconventional energy sources. Undoubtedly, it is necessary to conduct in-depth research on reservoir exploration methods to ensure high and stable CBM production in the development stage. However, current methods have disadvantages such as high cost, complex devices, and poor terrain adaptability, and therefore they are unsuitable for reasonable monitoring of CBM reservoirs. In contrast, electromagnetic prospecting methods are increasingly widely employed in the rapid delineation of conductive distributions, contributing a lot to in-situ reservoir interpretation. Furthermore, a natural source Super-Low Frequency electromagnetic component method (i.e., the SLF method for short) has been proposed and applied with high potential in a CBM enrichment area, Qinshui Basin, China. In this paper, this method is thoroughly discussed. The magnetic component responses of the SLF method can be used as the characteristic responses of subsurface layers, and the forward modeling algorithms using the finite element method have been successfully developed and verified. On this basis, the direct depth transformation and one-dimensional nonlinear regularization inversion algorithms of the magnetic component responses are proposed for geo-object interpretation. With the help of the empirical mode decomposition (EMD), an SLF data processing workflow is demonstrated theoretically and practically, which is integrated into a portable instrument. The instrument’s ability to identify the low-resistivity reservoirs and their surrounding rocks has been proved by field survey. The extraction of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) anomalies also helps to refine the reservoir interpretation with higher accuracy. A joint comparative inversion test between the SLF method and the audio-magnetotelluric method (AMT) is also addressed, demonstrating that the SLF method is reliably applicable in the field survey of CBM reservoirs. A preliminary statistical analysis shows that the depth resolution of CBM reservoirs can reach the order of tens of meters. Therefore, the SLF method is expected to become one of the most potential options for in-situ CBM exploration with a cost-effective interpretation capability.

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