地球与行星物理论评 (May 2024)
Application of the improved seismic AVAZ inversion method for fracture characterization of a tight sandstone gas reservoir in the Ordos Basin
Abstract
A tight sandstone gas reservoir is characterized by low porosity and permeability. The existence of fractures can improve the permeability of the reservoir, and fractures are a vital storage space and migration channel of oil and gas. The development of fractures is also conducive to forming a fracture network during hydraulic fracturing. The prediction of fractures can provide an essential basis for developing tight sandstone gas reservoirs. The variation of seismic amplitude with azimuth can provide information on vertical fractures in the reservoir. This study proposed an improved inversion method of azimuth amplitude difference for the HTI (transversely isotropy with a horizontal axis) medium and combined with the rock physical theory, predicted fracture weakness parameter, characterizing the fracture properties. Conventional inversion methods invert elastic and fracture parameters simultaneously. The improved azimuth amplitude difference method introduces a reference azimuth, builds the track set of azimuth amplitude difference to eliminate the isotropic background, and inverts only the fracture weakness parameters related to the anisotropic terms. Using the only azimuth anisotropic response, the sensitivity of fracture identification and the accuracy of fracture parameter inversion are improved. The application of the field data shows that the sensitivity of the proposed inversion method to the prediction of fracture parameters is improved compared with the conventional inversion method, and the predicted fracture weakness is consistent with the permeability well logs and has a significant correlation with the gas production of tight sandstone gas reservoirs. Therefore, the prediction of fracture distribution and development degree based on the proposed method can provide a reliable indicator for the identification and development of gas-bearing favorable areas in tight sandstone reservoirs.
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