4.6 Article

Impact of water saturation on the elastic anisotropy of the Whitby Mudstone, United Kingdom

Journal

GEOPHYSICS
Volume 85, Issue 1, Pages MR57-MR72

Publisher

SOC EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICISTS - SEG
DOI: 10.1190/GEO2019-0004.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dutch Upstream Gas Top-sector Initiative [TKIG01020]
  2. Energie Beheer Nederland (EBN)
  3. Neptune Energy Netherlands
  4. Wintershall Noordzee

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Mudstones are often anisotropic, which complicates depth conversion in seismic exploration and monitoring subsurface reservoirs during injection or production. In addition, the physical and mechanical properties of mudstones are highly sensitive to their water content. The elastic anisotropy of mudstones is not well understood because of their complex nature and the lack of laboratory experiments performed on well-preserved samples. Triaxial deformation tests were performed on mudstone core plugs to investigate the impact of water saturation on the elastic anisotropy of the Whitby Mudstone (United Kingdom). The mechanical and physical properties of the Whitby Mudstone were estimated from stress-strain and ultrasonic wave velocity data obtained on core plugs with different water saturations under isotropic and anisotropic stress conditions. The Whitby Mudstone has extremely high intrinsic elastic anisotropy (0.3-0.4) due to its composition and lamination. This elastic anisotropy increases with decreasing water content. There are three competing mechanisms that play a key role in the anisotropy increase due to dehydration such as (1) density contrast in the pore space (i.e., the presence of purely brine or a mixture of brine and air in the pore space), (2) formation of dehydration fractures, and (3) frame stiffening. Increasing the mean effective stress leads to a decrease in Thomsen's anisotropy parameters. and. because of the closure of defects, such as natural and dehydration fractures, and the formation of stress-induced fractures. The relationship between the wavefront anellipticity factor delta and the mean effective stress is nonmonotonic and can be related to the onset of inelastic deformation.

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