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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Book Series
Date
Availability
Reservoir facies design and modeling using probabilistic rock-physics templates Available to Purchase
Introduction to this special section: Distributed acoustic sensing Available to Purchase
Introduction to this special section: CO 2 in the subsurface Available to Purchase
Local and global fluid-flow effects on dipole flexural waves Available to Purchase
Introduction to this special section: Borehole geophysics Available to Purchase
Comparison of geophone and surface-deployed distributed acoustic sensing seismic data Available to Purchase
Introduction to this special section: Case studies: Conventionals Available to Purchase
3D simulation of seismic-wave propagation in fractured media using an integral method accommodating irregular geometries Available to Purchase
Local and global fluid effects on sonic wave modes Available to Purchase
Modeling the effects of microscale fabric complexity on the anisotropy of the Eagle Ford Shale Available to Purchase
Rock-physics-based double-difference inversion for CO 2 saturation and porosity at the Cranfield CO 2 injection site Available to Purchase
Diagnostics of seismic time-lapse effects of sandstones based on laboratory data Available to Purchase
Inversion of multicomponent 3D vertical seismic profile data for porosity and CO 2 saturation at the Cranfield injection site, Cranfield, MS Available to Purchase
Rock Physics Relationships between Elastic and Reservoir Properties in the Haynesville Shale Available to Purchase
Abstract Modeling the elastic properties of the Haynesville Shale using rock-physics techniques is part of the characterization of this shale that could be used to improve predictions of economic drilling locations. The goal of this modeling is to relate the reservoir properties of interest (e.g., porosity, pore shape, and composition) to the elastic properties. Although this is the same goal as in using rock physics for conventional reservoirs, the approach used here differs. Within the Haynesville Shale, the physical rock properties that most significantly affect the elastic properties appear to be the composition and pore shape. Accordingly, the rock-physics modeling requires an effective-medium theory, notably the self-consistent model, to accommodate these properties. Composition was estimated through a combination of well log and x-ray diffraction (XRD) data. Pore shapes were estimated using estimated stress conditions and numerical studies. The best modeling results explain trends in velocity measurements corresponding to joint variations of composition and pore shape. Accordingly, this rockphysics model could be used in conjunction with seismic data interpretation to identify locations with low velocity and potentially higher organic content and zones with faster velocity more suitable for fracturing.