4.7 Article

Characterizing Gas Hydrate-Bearing Marine Sediments Using Elastic Properties-Part 1: Rock Physical Modeling and Inversion from Well Logs

Journal

JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jmse10101379

Keywords

gas hydrates; gas hydrate saturation estimation; rock physics model (RPM); effective medium theory; elastic properties

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42074153, 42274160]
  2. CNPC Science Research and Technology Development Project [2021DJ3503]

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This paper establishes a rock physics model to quantify the elastic properties of sediments containing gas hydrates. The proposed technique can be employed to identify and predict gas hydrate saturation, improving our understanding of gas hydrates.
Gas hydrates are considered a potential energy source for the future. Rock physics modeling provides insights into the elastic response of sediments containing gas hydrates, which is essential for identifying gas hydrates using well-log data and seismic attributes. This paper establishes a rock physics model (RPM) by employing effective medium theories to quantify the elastic properties of sediments containing gas hydrates. Specifically, the proposed RPM introduces critical gas hydrate saturation for various modeling schemes. Such a key factor considers the impact of gas hydrates on sediment stiffnesses during the dynamic process of the gas hydrate accumulating as pore fillings and part of the solid components. Theoretical modeling illustrates that elastic characteristics of the sediments exhibit distinct variation trends determined by critical gas hydrate saturation. Numerical tests of the model based on the well-log data confirm that the proposed technique can be employed to rationally predict gas hydrate saturation using the elastic properties. The compressional wave velocity model is also developed to estimate the gas hydrate saturation, which gives reliable fit results to core measurement data. The proposed methods could improve our understanding of the elastic behaviors of gas hydrates, providing a practical approach to estimating their concentrations.

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