학술논문

Characteristics of microseismic data recorded by distributed acoustic sensing systems in anisotropic media
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geophysics. 85(4):KS139-KS147
Subject
20|Geophysics - applied (geophysical surveys & methods)
anisotropic materials
body waves
clastic rocks
distributed acoustic sensing
elastic waves
geophones
geophysical methods
hydraulic fracturing
instruments
microseismic methods
monitoring
natural gas
oil wells
P-waves
petroleum
reservoir rocks
S-waves
sedimentary rocks
seismic waves
SH-waves
shale
SV-waves
techniques
wave splitting
Language
English
ISSN
0016-8033
Abstract
Fiber-optic distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) cables are now used to monitor microseismicity during hydraulic-fracture stimulations of unconventional gas reservoirs. Unlike geophone arrays, DAS systems are sensitive to uniaxial strain or strain rate along the fiber direction and thus provide a 1C recording, which makes identifying the directionality and polarization of incoming waves difficult. Using synthetic examples, we have shown some fundamental characteristics of microseismic recordings on DAS systems for purposes of hydraulic fracture monitoring in a horizontal well in anisotropic (vertical transverse isotropy [VTI]) shales. We determine that SH arrivals dominate the recorded signals because their polarization is aligned along the horizontal cable at the near offset, although SV will typically dominate for events directly above or below the array. The amplitude of coherent shear-wave (S-wave) arrivals along the cable exhibits a characteristic pattern with bimodal peaks, the width of which relates to the distance of the event from the cable. Furthermore, we find that S-wave splitting recorded on DAS systems can be used to infer the inclination of the incoming waves, overcoming a current limitation of event locations that have constrained events to lie in a horizontal plane. Low-amplitude SV arrivals suggest an event depth similar to that of the DAS cable. Conversely, steep arrivals produce higher amplitude SV-waves, with S-wave splitting increasing with offset along the cable. Finally, we determine how polarity reversals observed in the P and SH phases can be used to provide strong constraints on the source mechanisms.