Interferometric hydrofracture microseism localization using neighboring fracture

Malcolm, Alison and Poliannikov, Oleg V. and Djikpesse, Hugues and Prange, Michael (2011) Interferometric hydrofracture microseism localization using neighboring fracture. Geophysics, 76 (6). WC27-WC36. ISSN 1942-2156

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Abstract

Hydraulic fracturing is the process of injecting high-pressure fluids into a reservoir to induce fractures and thus improve reservoir productivity. Microseismic event localization is used to locate created fractures. Traditionally, events are localized individually. Available information about events already localized is not used to help estimate other source locations. Traditional localization methods yield an uncertainty that is inversely proportional to the square root of the number of receivers. However, in applications where multiple fractures are created, multiple sources in a reference fracture may provide redundant information about unknown events in subsequent fractures that can boost the signal-to-noise ratio, improving estimates of the event positions. We used sources in fractures closer to the monitoring well to help localize events further away. It is known through seismic interferometry that with a 2D array of receivers, the traveltime between two sources may be recovered from a crosscorrelogram of two common source gathers. This allowed an event in the second fracture to be localized relative to an event in the reference fracture. A difficulty became evident when receivers are located in a single monitoring well. When the receiver array is 1D, classical interferometry cannot be directly employed because the problem becomes underdetermined. In our approach, interferometry was used to partially redatum microseismic events from the second fracture onto the reference fracture so that they can be used as virtual receivers, providing additional information complementary to that provided by the physical receivers. Our error analysis showed that, in addition to the gain obtained by having multiple physical receivers, the location uncertainty is inversely proportional to the square root of the number of sources in the reference fracture. Because the number of microseism sources is usually high, the proposed method will usually result in more accurate location estimates as compared with the traditional methods.

Item Type: Article
URI: http://research.library.mun.ca/id/eprint/12736
Item ID: 12736
Keywords: 3D, fractures, crosscorrelation, microseismic, traveltime
Department(s): Science, Faculty of > Earth Sciences
Date: November 2011
Date Type: Publication
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