Abstract

SUMMARY Obtaining the seismic response of rocks containing cracks whose scales are much smaller than the prevailing wavelengths is a classic and important problem in rock physics. Seminal analytical models yield the seismic signatures of cracked rocks saturated with a single fluid phase. However, in a wide variety of practically relevant scenarios, cracks may be partially saturated with multiple immiscible fluids of contrasting compressibilities, such as gas and water. When a passing seismic wave deforms the medium, fluid pressure gradients arise within such partially saturated cracks, which, in turn, tend to relax through a process commonly known as squirt flow. The corresponding viscous dissipation may greatly affect the seismic amplitudes and velocities, as well as the anisotropic behaviour of the medium. To date, extensions of classical analytical models to include squirt flow occurring within isolated partially saturated cracks remain limited either in the saturation or in the frequency range. In this work, we present a simple analytical model to compute the seismic response of rocks containing partially saturated aligned cracks accounting for squirt flow effects. First, we solve the linearized Navier–Stokes equations within a partially saturated penny-shaped crack subjected to an oscillatory strain. Then, we obtain a closed analytical expression for a complex-valued frequency-dependent effective fluid bulk modulus which accounts for the stiffness variations of each crack due to squirt flow. Using classic effective medium models, together with such an effective saturating fluid, we retrieve the effective compliance matrix of the probed partially saturated cracked rock. The proposed analytical solution is validated by comparison with corresponding 3-D numerical simulations and existing analytical models.

Highlights

  • Determining the fluid content of geological formations from seismic data is a complex task of great importance in a number of pertinent scenarios, such as, oil and gas exploration and production, geothermal energy exploitation, CO2 geosequestration, and enhanced oil recovery operations

  • We present a simple analytical model to compute the seismic response of rocks containing partially saturated aligned cracks accounting for squirt flow effects

  • The approach is based on solving the linearised Navier-Stokes equations within a partially saturated crack undergoing oscillatory variations in aperture that mimic the deformation caused by a passing seismic wavefield

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Summary

Introduction

Determining the fluid content of geological formations from seismic data is a complex task of great importance in a number of pertinent scenarios, such as, oil and gas exploration and production, geothermal energy exploitation, CO2 geosequestration, and enhanced oil recovery operations. The mere presence of cracks, which are largely recognised as omnipresent in Earth’s crust materials, can affect the seismic amplitudes and velocities, even if their characteristic scales are much smaller than the prevailing seismic wavelengths (e.g., Hudson 1980; Cheng 1993) In this context, models addressing the interrelationships existing between crack presence, pore fluid content, and corresponding seismic signatures, are of particular value for exploring partially saturated geological formations. The model developed by Hudson (1981) constitutes arguably one of the most employed frameworks for elastic constant determination of elastic isotropic media containing a dilute concentration of penny-shaped cracks This model considers that cracks are in the so-called unrelaxed state and, FPD processes triggered by seismic waves are not accounted for (e.g., Mavko et al 2009). Extending this theory to the partially relaxed state and, to the entire frequency band, requires a more comprehensive approach

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