Geologic Modeling of an Active CO2 EOR and Carbon Storage Project Using 3-D
Seismic
Models and Extracted Attributes, Farnsworth, TX
Abstract
The Farnsworth Unit in Ochiltree County, TX, is the site of the Southwest Partnership (SWP) on Carbon Sequestration's large-scale carbon capture, utilization, and storage experiment. A comprehensive 3D geologic model provides the basis for monitoring and modeling CO2 migration or leakage from the upper Morrow sandstone reservoir, which is undergoing tertiary recovery using anthropogenic CO2. The SWP acquired a 45 square mile 3D seismic
survey over the entire Farnsworth Unit. Also acquired were vertical
seismic
profiles, wireline logs, and core
data
from three new wells. Formation top interpretations are based on integrating 3D
seismic
and compressional sonic well log
data
into a velocity model to convert the
seismic
z-axis into the depth-domain. Converting domains allowed the 3D
seismic
data
to be correlated to other depth-domain datasets, such as new and legacy well log
data
and core sections. Surfaces generated from
seismic
interpretation
also provided the framework for a geologic model that can be populated with information from
seismic
attributes and thus allows propagation of reservoir properties into the 3D
seismic
volume.
Seismic
attributes describe a measurable characteristic of
seismic
data
that resolves features or quantifies some physical property. While fractures and faults are not always obvious in
seismic
data
, edge enhancing
seismic
attributes can be employed to highlight those features. Coherency volumes that measure waveform similarity and ant-tracking volumes that track continuous features were generated to illuminate possible fault structures. Three faults were interpreted that were resolvable across different attributes and defined planar features in three dimensions.
Seismic
attributes are also useful for determining rock properties that can populate a 3D geomodel. Geometric attributes that are sensitive to reflection impedance changes help predict porosity, lithology, and formation thicknesses. Work is ongoing to propagate lithologically sensitive attributes to identify channels that could act as preferential fluid flow paths in the Morrow sandstone.
AAPG Datapages/Search and Discovery Article #90216 ©2015 AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition, Denver, CO., May 31 - June 3, 2015