Petrophysical‐properties estimation integrating statistical rock‐physics with seismic inversion under Bayesian framework

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teng Long ◽  
Cheng Jiubing
Geophysics ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. O21-O37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dario Grana ◽  
Ernesto Della Rossa

A joint estimation of petrophysical properties is proposed that combines statistical rock physics and Bayesian seismic inversion. Because elastic attributes are correlated with petrophysical variables (effective porosity, clay content, and water saturation) and this physical link is associated with uncertainties, the petrophysical-properties estimation from seismic data can be seen as a Bayesian inversion problem. The purpose of this work was to develop a strategy for estimating the probability distributions of petrophysical parameters and litho-fluid classes from seismics. Estimation of reservoir properties and the associated uncertainty was performed in three steps: linearized seismic inversion to estimate the probabilities of elastic parameters, probabilistic upscaling to include the scale-changes effect, and petrophysical inversion to estimate the probabilities of petrophysical variables andlitho-fluid classes. Rock-physics equations provide the linkbetween reservoir properties and velocities, and linearized seismic modeling connects velocities and density to seismic amplitude. A full Bayesian approach was adopted to propagate uncertainty from seismics to petrophysics in an integrated framework that takes into account different sources of uncertainty: heterogeneity of the real data, approximation of physical models, measurement errors, and scale changes. The method has been tested, as a feasibility step, on real well data and synthetic seismic data to show reliable propagation of the uncertainty through the three different steps and to compare two statistical approaches: parametric and nonparametric. Application to a real reservoir study (including data from two wells and partially stacked seismic volumes) has provided as a main result the probability densities of petrophysical properties and litho-fluid classes. It demonstrated the applicability of the proposed inversion method.


Geophysics ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 75A165-75A176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Bosch ◽  
Tapan Mukerji ◽  
Ezequiel F. Gonzalez

There are various approaches for quantitative estimation of reservoir properties from seismic inversion. A general Bayesian formulation for the inverse problem can be implemented in two different work flows. In the sequential approach, first seismic data are inverted, deterministically or stochastically, into elastic properties; then rock-physics models transform those elastic properties to the reservoir property of interest. The joint or simultaneous work flow accounts for the elastic parameters and the reservoir properties, often in a Bayesian formulation, guaranteeing consistency between the elastic and reservoir properties. Rock physics plays the important role of linking elastic parameters such as impedances and velocities to reservoir properties of interest such as lithologies, porosity, and pore fluids. Geostatistical methods help add constraints of spatial correlation, conditioning to different kinds of data and incorporating subseismic scales of heterogeneities.


Geophysics ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 988-1001 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Mukerji ◽  
A. Jørstad ◽  
P. Avseth ◽  
G. Mavko ◽  
J. R. Granli

Reliably predicting lithologic and saturation heterogeneities is one of the key problems in reservoir characterization. In this study, we show how statistical rock physics techniques combined with seismic information can be used to classify reservoir lithologies and pore fluids. One of the innovations was to use a seismic impedance attribute (related to the [Formula: see text] ratio) that incorporates far‐offset data, but at the same time can be practically obtained using normal incidence inversion algorithms. The methods were applied to a North Sea turbidite system. We incorporated well log measurements with calibration from core data to estimate the near‐offset and far‐offset reflectivity and impedance attributes. Multivariate probability distributions were estimated from the data to identify the attribute clusters and their separability for different facies and fluid saturations. A training data was set up using Monte Carlo simulations based on the well log—derived probability distributions. Fluid substitution by Gassmann’s equation was used to extend the training data, thus accounting for pore fluid conditions not encountered in the well. Seismic inversion of near‐offset and far‐offset stacks gave us two 3‐D cubes of impedance attributes in the interwell region. The near‐offset stack approximates a zero‐offset section, giving an estimate of the normal incidence acoustic impedance. The far offset stack gives an estimate of a [Formula: see text]‐related elastic impedance attribute that is equivalent to the acoustic impedance for non‐normal incidence. These impedance attributes obtained from seismic inversion were then used with the training probability distribution functions to predict the probability of occurrence of the different lithofacies in the interwell region. Statistical classification techniques, as well as geostatistical indicator simulations were applied on the 3‐D seismic data cube. A Markov‐Bayes technique was used to update the probabilities obtained from the seismic data by taking into account the spatial correlation as estimated from the facies indicator variograms. The final results are spatial 3‐D maps of not only the most likely facies and pore fluids, but also their occurrence probabilities. A key ingredient in this study was the exploitation of physically based seismic‐to‐reservoir property transforms optimally combined with statistical techniques.


SPE Journal ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 13 (04) ◽  
pp. 412-422
Author(s):  
Subhash Kalla ◽  
Christopher D. White ◽  
James Gunning ◽  
Michael Glinsky

Summary Accurate reservoir simulation requires data-rich geomodels. In this paper, geomodels integrate stochastic seismic inversion results (for means and variances of packages of meter-scale beds), geologic modeling (for a framework and priors), rock physics (to relate seismic to flow properties), and geostatistics (for spatially correlated variability). These elements are combined in a Bayesian framework. The proposed workflow produces models with plausible bedding geometries, where each geomodel agrees with seismic data to the level consistent with the signal-to-noise ratio of the inversion. An ensemble of subseismic models estimates the means and variances of properties throughout the flow simulation grid. Grid geometries with possible pinchouts can be simulated using auxiliary variables in a Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method. Efficient implementations of this method require a posterior covariance matrix for layer thicknesses. Under assumptions that are not too restrictive, the inverse of the posterior covariance matrix can be approximated as a Toeplitz matrix, which makes the MCMC calculations efficient. The proposed method is examined using two-layer examples. Then, convergence is demonstrated for a synthetic 3D, 10,000 trace, 10 layer cornerpoint model. Performance is acceptable. The Bayesian framework introduces plausible subseismic features into flow models, whilst avoiding overconstraining to seismic data, well data, or the conceptual geologic model. The methods outlined in this paper for honoring probabilistic constraints on total thickness are general, and need not be confined to thickness data obtained from seismic inversion: Any spatially dense estimates of total thickness and its variance can be used, or the truncated geostatistical model could be used without any dense constraints. Introduction Reservoir simulation models are constructed from sparse well data and dense seismic data, using geologic concepts to constrain stratigraphy and property variations. Reservoir models should integrate spare, precise well data and dense, imprecise seismic data. Because of the sparseness of well data, stochastically inverted seismic data can improve estimates of reservoir geometry and average properties. Although seismic data are densely distributed compared to well data, they are uninformative about meter-scale features. Beds thinner than about 1/8 to 1/4 the dominant seismic wavelength cannot be resolved in seismic surveys (Dobrin and Savit 1988; Widess 1973). For depths of ˜3000 m, the maximum frequency in the signal is typically about 40 Hz, and for average velocities of ˜2,000 m/s, this translates to best resolutions of about 10 m. Besides the limited resolution, seismic-derived depths and thicknesses are uncertain because of noise in the seismic data and uncertainty in the rock physics models (Gunning and Glinsky 2004, 2006). This resolution limit and uncertainties associated with seismic depth and thickness estimates have commonly limited the use of seismic data to either inferring the external geometry or guiding modeling of plausible stratigraphic architectures of reservoirs (Deutsch et al. 1996). In contrast, well data reveal fine-scale features but cannot specify interwell geometry. To build a consistent model, conceptual stacking and facies models must be constrained by well and seismic data. The resulting geomodels must be gridded for flow simulation using methods that describe stratal architecture flexibly and efficiently.


Geophysics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (5) ◽  
pp. C177-C191 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yunyue Li ◽  
Biondo Biondi ◽  
Robert Clapp ◽  
Dave Nichols

Seismic anisotropy plays an important role in structural imaging and lithologic interpretation. However, anisotropic model building is a challenging underdetermined inverse problem. It is well-understood that single component pressure wave seismic data recorded on the upper surface are insufficient to resolve a unique solution for velocity and anisotropy parameters. To overcome the limitations of seismic data, we have developed an integrated model building scheme based on Bayesian inference to consider seismic data, geologic information, and rock-physics knowledge simultaneously. We have performed the prestack seismic inversion using wave-equation migration velocity analysis (WEMVA) for vertical transverse isotropic (VTI) models. This image-space method enabled automatic geologic interpretation. We have integrated the geologic information as spatial model correlations, applied on each parameter individually. We integrate the rock-physics information as lithologic model correlations, bringing additional information, so that the parameters weakly constrained by seismic are updated as well as the strongly constrained parameters. The constraints provided by the additional information help the inversion converge faster, mitigate the ambiguities among the parameters, and yield VTI models that were consistent with the underlying geologic and lithologic assumptions. We have developed the theoretical framework for the proposed integrated WEMVA for VTI models and determined the added information contained in the regularization terms, especially the rock-physics constraints.


Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-43
Author(s):  
Dario Grana

Rock physics models are physical equations that map petrophysical properties into geophysical variables, such as elastic properties and density. These equations are generally used in quantitative log and seismic interpretation to estimate the properties of interest from measured well logs and seismic data. Such models are generally calibrated using core samples and well log data and result in accurate predictions of the unknown properties. Because the input data are often affected by measurement errors, the model predictions are often uncertain. Instead of applying rock physics models to deterministic measurements, I propose to apply the models to the probability density function of the measurements. This approach has been previously adopted in literature using Gaussian distributions, but for petrophysical properties of porous rocks, such as volumetric fractions of solid and fluid components, the standard probabilistic formulation based on Gaussian assumptions is not applicable due to the bounded nature of the properties, the multimodality, and the non-symmetric behavior. The proposed approach is based on the Kumaraswamy probability density function for continuous random variables, which allows modeling double bounded non-symmetric distributions and is analytically tractable, unlike the Beta or Dirichtlet distributions. I present a probabilistic rock physics model applied to double bounded continuous random variables distributed according to a Kumaraswamy distribution and derive the analytical solution of the posterior distribution of the rock physics model predictions. The method is illustrated for three rock physics models: Raymer’s equation, Dvorkin’s stiff sand model, and Kuster-Toksoz inclusion model.


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