Virtual time-lapse seismic monitoring using fully coupled flow and geomechanical simulations

2017 
SEAM Time Lapse, a collaborative technical project of SEG and the Society of Petroleum Engineers, created integrated geologic, reservoir, and geophysical models to simulate temporal changes in the geometry and physical properties of a complex reservoir with the detail and accuracy needed to explain the subtle effects seen in time-lapse surveys of real oil fields. The geologic model consisted of 2 billion grid cells, representing a region 12.5 × 12.5 km in horizontal extent and 5 km in depth and including a 420 m thick reservoir with upper and lower units separated by an impermeable shale layer and offset by faults. Deepwater clastic turbidite channels and lobes were used to create a typical shallow Gulf of Mexico reservoir that also can serve as an analogue of other turbidite fields around the world. Stratigraphic detail within the reservoir was retained in the simulation model through careful finite-element meshing. The reservoir simulation computed the fully coupled three-phase fluid flow and linear geo...
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