Chapter 7: Prediction of Pore Fluid Viscosity Effects on P-wave Attenuation in Reservoir Sandstones
-
Published:January 01, 2010
-
CiteCitation
Angus Best, Clive McCann, Jeremy Sothcott, 2010. "Prediction of Pore Fluid Viscosity Effects on P-wave Attenuation in Reservoir Sandstones", Heavy Oils: Reservoir Characterization and Production Monitoring, Satinder Chopra, Laurence R. Lines, Douglas R. Schmitt, Michael L. Batzle
Download citation file:
- Share
-
Tools
Introduction
Seismic wave attenuation (absorption or intrinsic attenuation) is underutilized by the petroleum industry mainly because of the difficulty of measuring it with sufficient accuracy using seismic reflection methods. However, the recent trend toward time-lapse 3D seismic monitoring of reservoirs means that absolute attenuation measurements are no longer so important. Instead, temporal changes in seismic amplitude and wavelet frequency content could hold the key to interpreting changes in reservoir fluid properties in response to certain production strategies. Seismic monitoring of heavy-oil reservoirs would be particularly appropriate because of the known link between seismic attenuation and pore fluid viscosity (Batzle et...
Figures & Tables
Contents
Heavy Oils: Reservoir Characterization and Production Monitoring

Heavy oil is an important global resource with reserves comparable to those of conventional oil. As conventional resources get thinner, attention is being focused on heavy oil and bitumen, which hold the promise of becoming useful fuels. Already more than 1 million barrels of oil are being produced from the oil sands in Canada; heavy oil represents half of California’s crude oil production in the United States and is a major production in Mexico. With demand for global energy soaring, heavy oil will undoubtedly be an important resource to be exploited in a big way in the near future.
The SEG Development and Production Committee held its Heavy Oil Forum in Edmonton, Alberta, in July 2007. This was a joint research forum cosponsored by the Canadian Society of Exploration Geophysicists (CSEG) and SEG and hosted by the University of Alberta. Preceding the forum, a field trip took the participants to the vast Athabasca Oil Sands region where they observed the outcrops, open pit mining, and steam injection operations, followed by a tour of the steam-assisted gravity drainage projects. Topics of the well-attended forum included the definition of heavy oil; where is heavy oil found; how it is produced; heavy-oil reservoir characterization; fluid and rock properties; electrical, tilt, and gravity techniques; borehole, surface seismic measurements; and microseismicity.