Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Estimating SHmax azimuth with P sources and vertical geophones: Use P-P reflection amplitudes or use SV-P reflection times?

Journal Article · · Interpretation
 [1];  [2];  [2];  [2];  [3];  [3];  [4]
  1. Consultant, Maumee, Ohio 43537, USA. (corresponding author)
  2. Texseis, Houston, Texas 77055, USA.
  3. Battelle, Columbus, Ohio 43201, USA.
  4. CORE Energy, Traverse City, Michigan 49684, USA.

We compared two methods for extracting the azimuth of maximum horizontal stress (SHmax) from 3D land-based seismic data generated by a P source and recorded with vertical geophones. In the first method, we used the direct-SV mode that is produced by all land-based P sources. P sources generate SV illumination that radiates in all azimuth directions from a source station and creates SV-P reflections that are recorded by vertical geophones. Unless stratigraphy has steep dip, SV-P raypaths recorded by vertical geophones are the reverse of P-SV raypaths recorded by horizontal geophones. Thus, SV-P data provide the same S-wave sensitivity to stress fields as popular P-SV data do. In the second method, we retrieved P-P reflections and then performed an amplitude-variation-with-azimuth (AVA) analysis of the amplitude-gradient behavior of P-P reflection wavelets. We did this analysis in narrow azimuth corridors to determine the gradient of reflection-wavelet amplitudes as a function of azimuth. This P-P AVA amplitude-gradient method has been of great interest in the reflection seismology community since it was introduced in the late 1990s. Each of these methods, AVA analysis of the gradient of P-P reflection amplitudes and azimuth-dependent arrival times of SV-P reflections, can be used to determine the azimuth of SHmax stress. We compare the results of the two methods with ground truth measurements of SHmax azimuth at a CO2sequestration site in the Michigan Basin. SHmax azimuths were determined from P-P and SV-P data at three major boundaries at depths of approximately 3500 ft (1067 m), 5500 ft (1676 m), and 7500 ft (2286 m). Two estimates of SHmax azimuth (one using SV-P data and one using P-P data) were made at each stacking bin inside a 24 mi2(62 km2) image space. The result was approximately 98,000 estimates of SHmax azimuth across each of these three boundaries for each of these two prediction strategies. Histogram displays of PP AVA gradient estimates had peaks at correct azimuths of SHmax at all three depths, but the spread of the distributions widened with depth and split into two peaks at the deepest boundary. In contrast, each histogram of SHmax azimuth predicted by azimuth-dependent SV-P traveltimes had a single, definitive peak that was positioned at the correct SHmax azimuth at all three boundary depths.

Research Organization:
Battelle Memorial Institute, Columbus, OH (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Fossil Energy (FE)
DOE Contract Number:
FE0031686
OSTI ID:
1980961
Journal Information:
Interpretation, Vol. 10, Issue 2; ISSN 2324-8858
Publisher:
Society of Exploration Geophysicists
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (13)

AVO and interpretive processing of Sv-P reflections coexisting with P-P reflections on P-wave legacy data conference August 2017
Determining fast-S and slow-S propagation directions with SV-P data produced by buried explosives and recorded with vertical geophones journal May 2021
Practicing S-wave reflection seismology with “P-wave” sources: Concepts, principles, and overview conference August 2017
Examples of SV-P images made with P sources and vertical geophones conference August 2017
Real-data comparisons of direct-S modes produced by “P” sources and “gold standard” S sources conference August 2017
Land based S-wave reflection seismology with P sources — does it work? conference August 2017
Direct-SV radiation produced by land-based P-sources — Part 1: Surface sources journal August 2018
Direct-SV radiation produced by land-based P-sources — Part 2: Buried explosives journal August 2018
SV-P extraction and imaging for far-offset vertical seismic profile data journal August 2015
Comparisons of azimuth-blind P-P amplitude variation with angle (AVA) to azimuth-dependent AVA at calibration points of known fracture azimuth and fracture density conference September 2016
Azimuthal P-P prestack amplitudes in the presence of oil-filled aligned porosity (fracture porosity) journal November 2020
P‐wave reflection coefficients for transversely isotropic models with vertical and horizontal axis of symmetry journal May 1997
A simplification of the Zoeppritz equations journal April 1985