Time-lapse crosswell seismic tomography for monitoring injected CO2 in an onshore aquifer, Nagaoka, Japan

被引:69
|
作者
Saito, Hideki [1 ]
Nobuoka, Dai [1 ]
Azuma, Hiroyuki [1 ]
Xue, Ziqiu [2 ]
Tanase, Daiji [3 ]
机构
[1] Oyo Corp, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 3050841, Japan
[2] Res Inst Innovat Technol Earth RITE, Kizu, Kyoto 6190292, Japan
[3] Engn Adv Assoc Japan ENAA, Minato Ku, Tokyo 1050003, Japan
关键词
time-lapse; crosswell; seismic tomography; CO2; injection; onshore aquifer; Nagaoka;
D O I
10.1071/EG06030
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Japan's first pilot-scale CO2 sequestration experiment has been conducted in Nagaoka, where 10 400 t of CO2 have been injected in an onshore aquifer at a depth of about 1100 m. Among various measurements conducted at the site for monitoring the injected CO2, we conducted time-lapse crosswell seismic tomography between two observation wells to determine the distribution of CO2 in the aquifer by the change of P-wave velocities. This paper reports the results of the crosswell seismic tomography conducted at the site. The crosswell seismic tomography measurements were carried out three times; once before the injection as a baseline survey, and twice during the injection as monitoring surveys. The velocity tomograms resulting from the monitoring surveys were compared to the baseline survey tomogram, and velocity difference tomograms were generated. The velocity difference tomograms showed that velocity had decreased in a part of the aquifer around the injection well, where the injected CO2 was supposed to be distributed. We also found that the area in which velocity had decreased was expanding in the formation up-dip direction, as increasing amounts of CO2 were injected. The maximum velocity reductions observed were 3.0% after 3200 t of CO2 had been injected, and 3.5% after injection of 6200 t of CO2. Although seismic tomography could map the area of velocity decrease due to CO2 injection, we observed some contradictions with the results of time-lapse sonic logging, and with the geological condition of the cap rock. To investigate these contradictions, we conducted numerical experiments simulating the test site. As a result, we found that part of the velocity distribution displayed in the tomograms was affected by artefacts or ghosts caused by the source-receiver geometry for the crosswell tomography in this particular site. The maximum velocity decrease obtained by tomography (3.5%) was much smaller than that observed by sonic logging (more than 20%). The numerical experiment results showed that only 5.5% velocity reduction might be observed, although the model was given a 20% velocity reduction zone. Judging from this result, the actual velocity reduction can be more than 3.5%, the value we obtained from the field data reconstruction. Further studies are needed to obtain more accurate velocity values that are comparable to those obtained by sonic logging.
引用
收藏
页码:30 / 36
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Time-lapse VSP data processing for monitoring CO2 injection
    Cheng A.
    Huang L.
    Rutledge J.
    Leading Edge (Tulsa, OK), 2010, 29 (02): : 196 - 199
  • [22] Post-injection monitoring of stored CO2 at the Nagaoka pilot site: 5 Years time-lapse well logging results
    Mito, Saeko
    Xue, Ziqiu
    Energy Procedia, 2011, 4 : 3284 - 3289
  • [23] Post-Injection Monitoring of Stored CO2 at the Nagaoka Pilot Site: 5 Years Time-Lapse Well Logging Results
    Mito, Saeko
    Xue, Ziqiu
    10TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL TECHNOLOGIES, 2011, 4 : 3284 - 3289
  • [24] Feasibility of the quantitative time-lapse seismic characterisation of a heterogeneous co2 injection
    Isaenkov R.
    Glubokovskikh S.
    Gurevich B.
    Exploration Geophysics, 2019, 2019 (01) : 1 - 6
  • [25] Deep learning for characterizing CO2 migration in time-lapse seismic images
    Sheng, Hanlin
    Wu, Xinming
    Sun, Xiaoming
    Wu, Long
    FUEL, 2023, 336
  • [26] Time-lapse seismic modeling for CO2 sequestration at the Dickman Oilfield, Kansas
    Li, Jintan
    Liner, Christopher
    Stewart, Robert
    GEOPHYSICS, 2014, 79 (02) : B81 - B95
  • [27] Evaluation of a resistivity model derived from time-lapse well logging of a pilot-scale CO2 injection site, Nagaoka, Japan
    Nakajima, Takahiro
    Xue, Ziqiu
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL, 2013, 12 : 288 - 299
  • [28] DeepNRMS: Unsupervised deep learning for noise-robust CO2 monitoring in time-lapse seismic images
    Park, Min Jun
    Frigerio, Julio
    Clapp, Bob
    Biondi, Biondo
    GEOPHYSICS, 2024, 89 (04) : IM1 - IM11
  • [29] Joint impedance and facies inversion of time-lapse seismic data for improving monitoring of CO2 incidentally stored from CO2 EOR
    Barajas-Olalde, Cesar
    Mur, Alan
    Adams, Donald C.
    Jin, Lu
    He, Jun
    Hamling, John A.
    Gorecki, Charles D.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL, 2021, 112
  • [30] Application of crosswell seismic tomography using difference analysis with data normalization to monitor CO2 flooding in an aquifer
    Onishi, Kyosuke
    Ueyama, Tetsuyuki
    Matsuoka, Toshifumi
    Nobuoka, Dai
    Saito, Hideki
    Azuma, Hiroyuki
    Xue, Ziqiu
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL, 2009, 3 (03) : 311 - 321