Effect of Fracture Aperture on P-Wave Attenuation: A Seismic Physical Modelling Study

Aniekan Ekanem, Xiang-Yang Li, Mark Chapman, Ian Main, Jianxin Wei

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

We used the seismic physical modelling approach to study the effect of fracture thickness or aperture on P-wave attenuation, using a laboratory scale model of two horizontal layers. The first layer is isotropic while the second layer has six fractured blocks, each consisting of thin penny-shaped chips of 3 mm fixed diameter and same thickness to simulate a set of aligned vertical fractures. The thickness of the chips varies according to the blocks while the fracture density remains the same in each block. 2D reflection data were acquired with the physical model submerged in a water tank in a direction perpendicular to the fracture strikes using the pulse and transmission method. The induced attenuation was estimated from the preprocessed CMP gathers using the QVO method, which is an extension of the classical spectral ratio method of attenuation measurement from seismic data. The results of our analysis show a direct relationship between attenuation and the fracture thickness or aperture. The induced attenuation increases systematically with fracture thickness, implying more scattering of the wave energy in the direction of increasing aperture. This information may be useful to differentiate the effect caused by thin microcracks from that of large open fractures.
Original languageEnglish
Article number241279
Number of pages8
JournalISRN Geophysics
Volume2014
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2014

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Effect of Fracture Aperture on P-Wave Attenuation: A Seismic Physical Modelling Study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this