新型海洋振动器提供更高效、更环保的地震源

海洋振动器可提供更小的环境影响和更好的数据。

萨拉·阿马尔,海鸥;和 Peter Hanssen,Equinor

[编者注:这个故事的一个版本出现在 2020 年 9 月版 的 E&P Plus中在这里订阅杂志 。]  

主动地震采集是勘探新油气储量的首要关键步骤之一,也是优化现有油田开发和生产的基础。它使用离散位置的震源发出的地震波,其中一些能量从地下层反射回数以万计的记录传感器。然后对数据进行处理,得到地下图像,随后由地质学家进行分析,以确定碳氢化合物的商业矿藏。

典型的海洋地震采集是使用船后拖曳的气枪震源阵列进行的。这种声源通常包括大约 30 个不同体积的单气枪,所有气枪同时发射以产生尖锐的声峰。自 20 世纪 70 年代取代炸药使用以来,气枪的原理技术并没有太大发展,而且气枪本质上仍然不灵活。

塑造气枪源的能谱以适应特定的地质应用是非常具有挑战性的,这意味着在大多数情况下,源最终会发射比地震成像所需的能量更多的能量,以及比所使用的频率更高的能量形成最终的地震图像。海洋振动器系统能够发射与气枪源相同的能量,但它会随着时间的推移和精确选择的频率范围而分布。因此,它被认为对海洋动物的破坏和干扰较小。

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环保意识

环保意识的增强和由此产生的限制促使人们努力开发海洋振动器作为气枪的替代品。扫频海洋振动器是降低对环境的声音影响水平并满足任何限制的一种方法。过去,人们发现海洋振动器的能量输出不足,特别是在低频时。发现可实现的能谱在较高频率下与气枪能谱大致匹配,但在低频下无法匹配。

另一种方法是设计扫描,在每个频率下生成足够的能量,以产生对目标区域进行深度成像所需的信噪比。因此,对于任何海洋振动器操作来说,不仅需要避免未使用的能量传输,而且能够将这些多余的能量转移到有用的较低频率。与气枪不同,振动器可以准确定义针对特定地质环境和勘测目标应发射的频率。

面临的主要挑战是通过实用且可靠的船用振动器实现所需的低频输出。低频扫掠需要大量的排水量,因为压力输出取决于体积排水量的二阶导数。随着驱动频率的降低,这会导致输出滚降。深入的权衡分析表明,使用液压驱动技术使船用振动器能够达到低至 3 Hz 的低频。液压系统可以产生极高的力并实现快速驱动,同时精确控制相位和振幅。此外,液压系统是可靠的商业组件,广泛应用于航空和机器人等各个行业。

低音系统

为了开发商业上可行的海洋振动源,Shearwater 将宽带声地震源 (BASS) 系统作为一个整体进行考虑,并以一种能够为处理、操作和维护投影仪模块的所有支持子系统提供最佳功能和交互的方式进行设计。 。投影仪模块是在水中拖曳的单元,旨在能够发射特定波形。

Shearwater 将 BASS 投影仪模块的尺寸缩小至约 2 m x 2 m x 3 m,重量降至约 5,000 kg。这使得可以在标准地震船的后甲板上处理多个投影仪,并根据测量要求以灵活的源几何形状将它们拖到船后面。一艘小型震源船将能够并行牵引多达八个 BASS 投影仪模块,再现标准气枪源的输出,并且船上仍然有空间容纳多个替换模块。

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该渲染图描绘了一个配置示例,其中四个投影仪模块拖曳在悬挂在浮体上的地震船后面。这些装置部署在不同的深度,并且在船后的排列方式也不同。(来源:海鸥)

到目前为止,这里只讨论了避免发射多余的较高频率的能力,但由于振动器也会随着时间的推移扫描地震能量,因此声压级 (SPL) 显着降低,从而将声学足迹从数千次爆裂声减少到大约类似于街道旁边持续不断的呼啸声。此外,人们还可以随意调节声音暴露水平(SEL),这是衡量在一定时间内发出多少能量的指标。频率内容、SPL 和 SEL 是环境影响的衡量标准,这些可以通过 BASS 精确定制。

除了海洋振动器的环境优势之外,地震信号相位的精确控制提供了与气枪系统相比获得显着效率优势的方法。

通过利用先进的处理技术,结合针对勘测区域精心设计的源几何形状,源生产率有望大大提高。生产力提高的主要推动因素是 BASS 的方向性,使得释放梯度源处理能力成为可能,如海底节点 (OBN) 的情况所示。

全方位 OBN 勘测被认为是图像质量和准确表征储层特性的能力方面的黄金标准。尽管质量优异,但由于成本原因,只有不到 40% 的地震数据是在海底采集的。海底采集成本高的原因之一是现场采集时间长,进而导致船舶成本高。建模表明,BASS 海洋振动器系统可以潜在地减少采集时间和总体勘测成本。

BASS 海洋振动器系统将使全球勘探与生产公司能够在对环境影响较小的情况下运营,这对于商业捕捞等其他海洋活动导致采集窗口繁忙或狭窄的地区尤其重要。海洋振动器是一个潜在的游戏规则改变者,因为它们解决了三个重要目标:更高的效率、更少的环境影响和更好的数据。

原文链接/hartenergy

New Marine Vibrator Offers A More Efficient and Eco-Friendly Seismic Source

Marine vibrators provide less environmental impact and better data.

Sara Amar, Shearwater; and Peter Hanssen, Equinor

[Editor's note: A version of this story appears in the September 2020 edition of E&P Plus. Subscribe to the magazine here.]  

Active seismic acquisition is one of the first key steps in the exploration for new oil and gas reserves and is also fundamental in the effort to optimize the development and production of existing oil fields. It uses seismic waves emitted by sources at discrete locations, and some of that energy is reflected back from layers in the subsurface to tens of thousands of recording sensors. The data are then processed to give an image of the subsurface, which is later analyzed by geologists to identify commercial deposits of hydrocarbons.

A typical marine seismic acquisition is conducted using airgun source arrays towed behind a vessel. Such a source typically comprises about 30 single airguns of different volumes, all firing at the same time to produce a sharp acoustic peak. The principle technology of airguns has not evolved much since the 1970s when it replaced the use of dynamite, and airguns stayed inherently inflexible by nature.

It is very challenging to shape the energy spectrum of an airgun source to suit a particular geological application, which means that in most cases the source ends up emitting more energy than what is required for seismic imaging as well as energy at higher frequencies than those used to form the final seismic image. The marine vibrator system has the capability to emit the same energy as an airgun source, but it distributed over time and over a precisely chosen frequency range. Therefore, it is considered less damaging and disturbing to marine fauna.

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Environmental awareness

Increased environmental awareness and the resulting restrictions have motivated new efforts toward the development of marine vibrators as an alternative to airguns. Swept-frequency marine vibrators are one way to reduce levels of sound impact to the environment and to satisfy any restrictions. In the past, marine vibrators have been found to be deficient in energy output, especially at low frequencies. The achievable energy spectrum was found to roughly match the airgun energy spectrum at higher frequencies, but it failed to match it at low frequencies.

An alternative approach is to design the sweep to generate just enough energy at each frequency to create the required signal-to-noise ratio for imaging the target area in depth. Therefore, it is a necessity for any marine vibrator operation to not only avoid unused energy transmissions but to be able to move this excess energy to useful lower frequencies. Unlike airguns, vibrators allow the exact definition of which frequencies should be emitted for a specific geological setting and the survey target.

A main challenge that presents itself is achieving the required low frequency output with a practical and reliable marine vibrator. Sweeping at low frequencies requires a large volume of water displacement as the pressure output depends on the second derivative of the volume displacement. This leads to a roll-off in output as the driving frequency is reduced. An in-depth trade-off analysis shows that using a hydraulic-based drive technology enables the marine vibrator to reach low frequencies down to 3 Hz. Hydraulics can produce extremely high forces and enable fast actuation, while precisely controlling the phase and amplitude. Furthermore, hydraulics are reliable commercial components and are used widely in various industries such as aviation and robotics.

BASS system

To develop a commercially viable marine vibrator source, Shearwater has considered the Broadband Acoustic Seismic Source (BASS) system as a whole and designed it in a way that provides optimal functionality and interaction of all supporting subsystems that will handle, operate and maintain the projector modules. The projector modules are the units towed in the water, designed to be able to emit a specific waveform.

Shearwater has reduced the dimensions of a BASS projector module to about 2 m-by-2 m-by-3 m and its weight to about 5,000 kg. This makes it possible to handle multiple projectors on the back deck of a standard seismic vessel and tow them behind the vessel in a flexible source geometry based on the survey requirements. A small seismic source vessel will be able to tow up to eight BASS projector modules in parallel, reproducing the output of a standard airgun source and still have space for multiple replacement modules on board.

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The rendering depicts an example of a configuration with four projector modules towed behind the seismic vessel hanging from floats. The units are deployed at different depths and do not have the same alignment behind the vessel. (Source: Shearwater)

So far, only the ability to avoid emitting superfluous higher frequencies has been discussed here, but because the vibrator also sweeps the seismic energy over time, the sound pressure level (SPL) is significantly reduced, reducing the acoustic footprint from thousands of pops to something comparable to a constant whoosh next to a street. Additionally, one can also moderate the sound exposure level (SEL) at will, which is a measure of how much energy is sent out over a certain time duration. Frequency content, SPL and SEL are measures of environmental impact, and these can be customized precisely with the BASS.

Next to the environmental advantages of a marine vibrator, the precise control of the phase of the seismic signal provides the means to obtain a significant efficiency advantage compared to an airgun system.

By utilizing advanced processing techniques, combined with a smartly designed source geometry tailored to the survey area, the source productivity is expected to greatly increase. The main enabler of the productivity increase is the directivity of the BASS, making it possible to unlock gradient-source processing capabilities as shown in the case of ocean-bottom nodes (OBN).

Full-azimuth OBN surveys are considered to be the gold standard in terms of image quality and the ability to accurately characterize reservoir properties. Despite their superior quality, less than 40% of all seismic acquisitions are on the ocean bottom, mainly due to cost. One reason for the high cost of seabed acquisition results from the long acquisition times in the field, and consequently the vessel costs. Modeling shows that the BASS marine vibrator system can potentially reduce the acquisition time and the overall survey cost.

The BASS marine vibrator system will enable global E&P companies to operate with lower impact to the environment, which may be particularly important in areas with busy or narrow acquisition windows due to other marine activities, such as commercial fishing. Marine vibrators are a potential game changer because they address three important objectives: more efficiency, less environmental impact and better data.