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Numerical modeling of time-lapse seismic data from fractured reservoirs including fluid flow and geochemical processesShekhar, Ravi 15 May 2009 (has links)
Fractured reservoirs, especially in low permeable carbonate rocks, are important
target for hydrocarbon exploration and production because fractures can control
fluid flow inside the reservoir. Hence, quantitative knowledge of fracture attributes is
important for optimal hydrocarbon production. However, in some cases fractures can
cause leakage of injected CO2 during enhanced oil recovery (EOR) or CO2 sequestration.
Furthermore, CO2 can geochemically interact with reservoir fluids and host
rock. Hence, time-lapse monitoring of the progress of CO2 in fractured reservoirs is
also very important.
In order to address these challenges, I have developed an integrated approach for
studying fluid flow and seismic wave propagation in fractured media using Discrete
Fracture Network (DFN) models. My seismic simulation study suggests that CO2
saturated reservoir shows approximately ten times more attenuation than brine saturated
reservoir. Similarly, large P-wave velocity variation in CO2 saturated reservoir
and amplitude variation with offset (AVO) results for our example model predicts
that CO2 is easier to detect than brine in the fractured reservoirs.
The effects of geochemical processes on seismics are simulated by time-lapse modeling
for t = 1000 years. My modeling study suggests that intra-aqueous reactions are
more significant during injection of CO2 for t = 6 years, while slower mineral reactions
dominate after pressure equilibrium is achieved that is from t = 6 to 1000 years.
Overall both types of geochemical reactions cause change in reflection coefficient of 2
to 5%, which may be difficult to detect in some cases. However, the significant change
in the seismic properties at the boundary of the CO2 front can be used to detect the
flow path of CO2 inside the reservoirs. Finally, a method for generating stochastic
fracture models was extended and improved to more realistic field model for seismic
and fluid modeling. My detail analysis suggests that fractures generated by isotropic
stress field favor orthogonal sets of fractures in most subsurface rocks that can be converted to seismic model, similar to DFN study. The quality and validity of the
models is assessed by comparisons to DFN models, including calculations of fractal
dimension measures that can help to characterize fractured reservoirs.
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Time-lapse seismic modeling and production data assimilation for enhanced oil recovery and CO2 sequestrationKumar, Ajitabh 15 May 2009 (has links)
Production from a hydrocarbon reservoir is typically supported by water or carbon
dioxide (CO2) injection. CO2 injection into hydrocarbon reservoirs is also a promising
solution for reducing environmental hazards from the release of green house gases into
the earth’s atmosphere. Numerical simulators are used for designing and predicting the
complex behavior of systems under such scenarios. Two key steps in such studies are
forward modeling for performance prediction based on simulation studies using
reservoir models and inverse modeling for updating reservoir models using the data
collected from field.
The viability of time-lapse seismic monitoring using an integrated modeling of fluid
flow, including chemical reactions, and seismic response is examined. A
comprehensive simulation of the gas injection process accounting for the phase
behavior of CO2-reservoir fluids, the associated precipitation/dissolution reactions, and
the accompanying changes in porosity and permeability is performed. The simulation results are then used to model the changes in seismic response with time. The general
observation is that gas injection decreases bulk density and wave velocity of the host
rock system.
Another key topic covered in this work is the data assimilation study for hydrocarbon
reservoirs using Ensemble Kalman Filter (EnKF). Some critical issues related to EnKF
based history matching are explored, primarily for a large field with substantial
production history. A novel and efficient approach based on spectral clustering to select
‘optimal’ initial ensemble members is proposed. Also, well-specific black-oil or
compositional streamline trajectories are used for covariance localization. Approach is
applied to the Weyburn field, a large carbonate reservoir in Canada. The approach for
optimal member selection is found to be effective in reducing the ensemble size which
was critical for this large-scale field application. Streamline-based covariance
localization is shown to play a very important role by removing spurious covariances
between any well and far-off cell permeabilities.
Finally, time-lapse seismic study is done for the Weyburn field. Sensitivity of various
bulk seismic parameters viz velocity and impedance is calculated with respect to
different simulation parameters. Results show large correlation between porosity and
seismic parameters. Bulk seismic parameters are sensitive to net overburden pressure at
its low values. Time-lapse changes in pore-pressure lead to changes in bulk parameters
like velocity and impedance.
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Validation of KIDScore™ D3 Basic, a morphokinetic model for improved embryo selectionPorath, Sandra January 2015 (has links)
ABSTRACT Infertility is a medical condition that affects approximately 16 % of Swedish couples in childbearing age and is a condition found in both men and women. When a couple has been trying to conceive for more than 12 months without success they need to see a health care provider. Infertility can be treated with medicine, insemination or assisted reproductive technology such as in-vitro fertilization (IVF) and intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). The aim of this study was to validate a morphokinetic selection model, KIDScore™ D3 Basic, against morphological selection model that is currently in use at the Fertility unit at University hospital in Orebro. A total of 782 embryos with known implantation data were assessed both y use of KIDScore™ D basic and the morphological selection model. The results from the study showed that KIDScore™ D3 Basic better discriminates between implanting and non-implanting embryos. Another strong finding in this study was the notion that presence of multinucleation at the two cell stage decreased chance of implantation significantly. The majority of implanting embryos belonged to the best morphokinetic class, whereas for morphology the majority of implanting embryos belonged to the second best class. The combination it of morphology and morphokinetic is to recommend as clinical use as it provided the best selection tool.
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Time-lapse seismic monitoring for enhanced oil recovery and carbon capture and storage field site at Cranfield field, MississippiDitkof, Julie Nicole 17 February 2014 (has links)
The Cranfield field, located in southwest Mississippi, is an enhanced oil recovery and carbon sequestration project that has been under a continuous supercritical CO₂ injection by Denbury Onshore LLC since 2008. Two 3D seismic surveys were collected in 2007, pre-CO₂ injection, and in 2010 after > 2 million tons of CO₂ was injected into the subsurface. The goal of this study is to characterize a time-lapse response between two seismic surveys to understand where injected CO₂ is migrating and to map the injected CO₂ plume edge. In order to characterize a time-lapse response, the seismic surveys were cross equalized using a trace-by-trace time shift. A normalized root-mean-square (NRMS) difference value was then calculated to determine the repeatability of the data. The data were considered to have “good repeatability,” so a difference volume was calculated and showed a coherent seismic amplitude anomaly located through the area of interest. A coherent seismic amplitude anomaly was also present below the area of interest, so a time delay analysis was performed and calculated a significant added velocity change. A Gassmann-Wood fluid substitution workflow was then performed at two well locations to predict a saturation profile and observe post-injection expected changes in compressional velocity values at variable CO₂ saturations. Finally, acoustic impedance inversions were performed on the two seismic surveys and an acoustic impedance difference volume was calculated to compare with the fluid substitution results. The Gassmann-Wood fluid substitution results predicted smaller changes in acoustic impedance than those observed from acoustic impedance inversions. At the Cranfield field, time-lapse seismic analysis was successful in mapping and quantifying the acoustic impedance change for some seismic amplitude anomalies associated with injected CO₂. Additional well log data and refinement of the fluid substitution workflow and the model-based inversion performed is necessary to obtain more accurate impedance changes throughout the field instead of at a single well location. / text
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Time-lapse gravity data for monitoring and modeling artificial recharge through a thick unsaturated zoneKennedy, Jeffrey, Ferré, Ty P. A., Creutzfeldt, Benjamin 09 1900 (has links)
Groundwater-level measurements in monitoring wells or piezometers are the most common, and often the only, hydrologic measurements made at artificial recharge facilities. Measurements of gravity change over time provide an additional source of information about changes in groundwater storage, infiltration, and for model calibration. We demonstrate that for an artificial recharge facility with a deep groundwater table, gravity data are more sensitive to movement of water through the unsaturated zone than are groundwater levels. Groundwater levels have a delayed response to infiltration, change in a similar manner at many potential monitoring locations, and are heavily influenced by high-frequency noise induced by pumping; in contrast, gravity changes start immediately at the onset of infiltration and are sensitive to water in the unsaturated zone. Continuous gravity data can determine infiltration rate, and the estimate is only minimally affected by uncertainty in water-content change. Gravity data are also useful for constraining parameters in a coupled groundwater-unsaturated zone model (Modflow-NWT model with the Unsaturated Zone Flow (UZF) package).
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Time-lapse motion pictures, a tool in meteorologyTourville, Lloyd W. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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C02 quantification using seismic attributes in laboratory experimentsKeshavarz Faraj Khah, Nasser January 2007 (has links)
Sequestration has been suggested as a solution for resolving the problem of increasing greenhouse gas emissions. CO2 is the major greenhouse gas which results from using fossil fuels for domestic and industrial purposes. Different geological targets have been suggested as reservoirs for CO2 sequestration with saline aquifers being the focus of this research. Monitoring and verification of injected CO2 into the ground is an essential part of CO2 sequestration because there is a strong requirement to understand and correctly manage the CO2 flow and movement within the reservoir over time. This includes a need to understand mobile CO2 in its all phases (gas, liquid, supercritical and dissolved in formation water). It is now well recognised that monitoring injected liquids in the sub-surface can be done remotely using surface seismic monitoring techniques. Seismic waves are sensitive to the contrast in the physical properties of formation water and CO2. As a gas, the migration path of CO2 has been shown to be easily imaged but such images provide only a qualitative rather than a quantitative solution, which is inadequate to remotely verify storage volumetrics. The complexity of saline aquifer reservoirs containing the different phases of CO2 (a function of reservoir pressure, temperature, and chemical composition and the state of phase of injected CO2) requires a good knowledge base of how the seismic response changes to such changes in CO2 phase and reservoir heterogeneities for verification purposes. / In this research, transmission ultrasonic seismic experiments were performed under controlled pressure, temperature and CO2 dissolution conditions in water. Different forms of simulated rock matrix were used to understand how seismic attributes changed with changing sequestration conditions. Data analysis showed that the commonly used approach of seismic velocity analysis is not particularly sensitive to dissolved CO2 whereas seismic amplitude was very sensitive to dissolved CO2 content and is the seismic attribute of choice for the future quantification of CO2. The density increase in formation water brine as a result of CO2 mixture was found to be directly related to transmission amplitude and provides the potential for prediction and thus, remote quantification. Also, there was confirmation during the transmission experiments that seismic amplitude changes markedly when CO2 changes phase from its dissolved form into a gas, as a result of significant attenuation by CO2 bubbles. Analysis showed that the dominant and centre frequency of the spectra also responded to CO2 phase when it changed from dissolved to its free gas form. However, these attributes appear to be of use in a qualitative manner rather than quantitative. The CO2 pre-bubble phase was studied in an attempt to obtain a basic knowledge of the effect on seismic amplitude variation for quantifying dissolved gas amounts with some success. This knowledge has an application in Gas-to-Oil-Ratio mapping in depleting oil fields and can assist the future management of production from fields which are at the stage of near-bubble point due to pressure depletion. / The results of this research have an application in time-lapse seismic monitoring and operational management of greenhouse gas sequestration operations. In particular, the VSP and cross-well seismic methods are immediate beneficiaries of this research, with further work required for application to 3-D reflectivity methods in time-lapse surface seismic monitoring.
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Temporal changes in gas hydrate mound topography and ecology: deep-sea time-lapse camera observationsVardaro, Michael Fredric 30 September 2004 (has links)
A deep-sea time-lapse camera and several temperature probes were deployed on the Gulf of Mexico continental shelf at a biological community associated with a gas hydrate outcropping to study topographic and hydrologic changes over time. The deployment site, Bush Hill (GC 185), is located at 27°47.5' N and 91°15.0' W at depths of ~540m. The digital camera recorded one still image every six hours for three months in 2001, every two hours for the month of June 2002 and every six hours for the month of July 2002. Temperature probes were in place at the site for the entire experimental period. The data recovered provide a record of processes that occur at gas hydrate mounds. Biological activity was documented by identifying the fauna observed in the time-lapse record and recording the number of individuals and species in each image. 1,381 individual organisms representing 16 species were observed. Sediment resuspension and redistribution were regular occurrences during the deployment periods. By digitally analyzing the luminosity of the water column above the mound and plotting the results over time, the turbidity at the site was quantified. A significant diurnal pattern can be seen in both luminosity and temperature records, indicating a possible tidal or inertial component to deep-sea currents in this area. Contrary to expectations, there was no major change in shape or size of the gas hydrate outcrop at this site on the time frame of this study. This indicates that this particular mound was more stable than suggested by laboratory studies and prior in situ observations. The stable topography of the gas hydrate mound combined with high bacterial activity and sediment turnover appears to focus benthic predatory activity in the mound area. The frequency and recurrence of sediment resuspension indicates that short-term change in the depth and distribution of surface sediments is a feature of the benthos at the site. Because the sediment interface is a critical environment for hydrocarbon oxidation and chemosynthesis, short-term variability and heterogeneity may be important characteristics of these settings.
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Regulation of Aurora A activity during checkpoint recoveryZhou, Yan January 2012 (has links)
Cell division requires accurate DNA replication and cells develop checkpoint mechanisms toensure the correct passage of the genetic material. Cells arrest by a checkpoint when DNAdamage is found. After the checkpoint is silenced, the cell cycle can be resumed. Polo-likekinase 1 (Plk1) and Aurora A kinase (AurA) are both important regulators for checkpointrecovery. The question how AurA is activated was studied by many researchers, but the exactmechanism stays unclear.We developed a new setup to study AurA activation during checkpoint recovery. Quantitativeimmunofluorescence of fixed cells as well as a FRET probe that monitors Plk1 activity intime-lapse filming were applied in this study as indirect readouts of Aurora A activation. Theresult suggests that a Plk1-AurA feedback loop exists during checkpoint recovery. It can alsobe concluded that the inhibition of Cdk1 reduces Plk1 and AurA activity during checkpointrecovery. We also investigated the effect of calcium interfering drugs on AurA activation butno conclusive result was obtained.
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Temporal changes in gas hydrate mound topography and ecology: deep-sea time-lapse camera observationsVardaro, Michael Fredric 30 September 2004 (has links)
A deep-sea time-lapse camera and several temperature probes were deployed on the Gulf of Mexico continental shelf at a biological community associated with a gas hydrate outcropping to study topographic and hydrologic changes over time. The deployment site, Bush Hill (GC 185), is located at 27°47.5' N and 91°15.0' W at depths of ~540m. The digital camera recorded one still image every six hours for three months in 2001, every two hours for the month of June 2002 and every six hours for the month of July 2002. Temperature probes were in place at the site for the entire experimental period. The data recovered provide a record of processes that occur at gas hydrate mounds. Biological activity was documented by identifying the fauna observed in the time-lapse record and recording the number of individuals and species in each image. 1,381 individual organisms representing 16 species were observed. Sediment resuspension and redistribution were regular occurrences during the deployment periods. By digitally analyzing the luminosity of the water column above the mound and plotting the results over time, the turbidity at the site was quantified. A significant diurnal pattern can be seen in both luminosity and temperature records, indicating a possible tidal or inertial component to deep-sea currents in this area. Contrary to expectations, there was no major change in shape or size of the gas hydrate outcrop at this site on the time frame of this study. This indicates that this particular mound was more stable than suggested by laboratory studies and prior in situ observations. The stable topography of the gas hydrate mound combined with high bacterial activity and sediment turnover appears to focus benthic predatory activity in the mound area. The frequency and recurrence of sediment resuspension indicates that short-term change in the depth and distribution of surface sediments is a feature of the benthos at the site. Because the sediment interface is a critical environment for hydrocarbon oxidation and chemosynthesis, short-term variability and heterogeneity may be important characteristics of these settings.
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