Abstract

Oil and gas exploration increasingly requires high-resolution imaging of small, irregularly shaped, and highly heterogeneous well-side complex and abnormal geo-bodies. Conventional borehole acoustic imaging is often unable to accurately obtain the position and azimuth of small-scale abnormal geo-bodies. This study presents an inversion method that uses scattered waves for borehole 3D acoustic imaging and an implementation scheme that combines plane and spherical scanning imaging. The finite-difference time-domain method was used to simulate the acoustic fields for borehole azimuthal acoustic imaging of one and two caves next to a well. The proposed inversion method of 3D spatial scanning based on multi-mode wave information was validated through numerical simulations investigating the effect of different parameters on the imaging results. The simulation results show that the cave-scattered waves include the PP-, PS-, SP-, and SS-waves. When plane scanning imaging is performed based on a single wave mode, the other wave modes become interference factors. After the weighted processing of the PP-, PS-, SP-, and SS-waves, plane scanning imaging based on multi-mode scattered acoustic waves is shown to weaken pseudo-solutions, enhance the signal-to-noise ratio, and improve the radial and axial positioning accuracy of scatterers. When the scatterer is close to the borehole axis, the echo received by the receiver is not a real plane wave. In contrast with the 3D slowness time coherence (STC) and beamforming methods, spherical scanning imaging based on single-mode scattered acoustic waves completely considers this fact, which improves its azimuth positioning accuracy. Furthermore, spherical scanning imaging based on multi-mode scattered acoustic waves accurately estimates the azimuth of caves beside a well with a high imaging resolution. Finally, numerical simulation results were validated using the field measurement data of a well, and the actual imaging effect of the new method was tested. Therefore, rather than using single-mode reflected waves with limited information, the proposed method of scanning imaging using scattered acoustic waves can substantially improve the imaging resolution and positioning accuracy of small-scale abnormal geo-bodies beside a well and enhance the detection range.

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