Frontiers in Earth Science (Aug 2022)

Saturation sensitivity and influencing factors of marine DC resistivity inversion to submarine gas hydrate

  • Ning Qiu,
  • Ning Qiu,
  • Ning Qiu,
  • Qicheng Fu,
  • Qicheng Fu,
  • Qicheng Fu,
  • Liu Yang,
  • Liu Yang,
  • Liu Yang,
  • Zhen Sun,
  • Zhen Sun,
  • Yanjun Chang,
  • Bingrui Du

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.900025
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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The submarine gas hydrate usually exists in the sediment on the continental slope. The bottom simulating reflector on the reflected seismic was identified as the bottom of the hydrate stability zone. However, many BSRs may not find the hydrate’s effective storage and its underlying free gas in many places. It is essential to identify the saturation of the hydrate. The resistivity can be used to evaluate the hydrate’s porosity and saturation. The hydrate boasts a high resistance to the surrounding sediments. The sensitivity of the marine Direct Current resistivity method (DCR) to the high resistance of the sediment can be used to evaluate the saturation of the hydrate. We have assessed the sensitivity of various DCR array arrangements, towed depths, hydrate thicknesses, and saturation. These influencing factors for improving recognition ability were also systematically analyzed. We have compared the inversion results of various DCR array arrangements, as well as different depths, thicknesses, and hydrate saturation, and calculated the saturation. We suggest using the corrected saturation equation to analyze the DCR results, which can improve the ability of hydrate identification. Evaluating these parameters will help develop or select DCR instruments for detecting the submarine gas hydrate.

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