Stud. Geophys. Geod., 51 (2007), 119-140 119
© 2007 StudiaGeo s.r.o., Prague
DETERMINATION OF POROSITY AND SATURATION USING
SEISMIC WAVEFORM INVERSION
H. KEERS
*
, L. JOHNSON, D. VASCO
Center for Computational Seismology, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley,
California 94720, USA (hkeers@cambridge.oilfield.slb.com, lrj@ccs.lbl.gov, dwvasco@lbl.gov)
Received: August 12, 2005; Revised: May 2, 2006; Accepted: October 6, 2006
ABSTRACT
Characterization of a reservoir model requires determination of its petrophysical
parameters, such as porosity and saturation. We propose a new method to determine
these parameters directly from seismic data. The method consists of the computation and
inversion of seismic waveforms. A high frequency method is presented to model wave
propagation through an attenuative and dispersive poroelastic medium. The high
frequency approximation makes it possible to efficiently compute sensitivity functions.
This enables the inversion of seismic waveforms for porosity and saturation. The
waveform inversion algorithm is applied to two laboratory crosswell datasets of a water
saturated sand. The starting models were obtained using travel time tomography. The first
dataset is inverted for porosity. The misfit reduction for this dataset is approximately
50%. The second dataset was obtained after injection of a nonaqueous-phase liquid
(NAPL), possibly with some air, which made the medium more heterogeneous. This
dataset was inverted for NAPL and air saturation using the porosity model obtained from
the first inversion. The misfit reduction of the second experiment was 70%. Regions of
high NAPL and high air saturation were found at the same location. These areas
correlate well with the position of one of the injection points as well as regions of higher
NAPL concentrations found after excavation of the sand. It is therefore possible to
directly invert waveforms for pore fluid saturation by taking into account the attenuation
and dispersion caused by the poroelasticity.
K e y w o r d s : poroelasticity, waveform inversion, crosswell seismics, scattering,
saturation
1. INTRODUCTION
One of the goals of exploration geophysics is the use of seismic data to determine
reservoir (or hydrological) properties such as porosity, saturation, and permeability.
*
Currently at: Schlumberger Cambridge Research, High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge,
CB3 0EL, UK