Abstract

Case Story: Time-Lapse Seismic Crosswell Monitoring of CO2 injected in an Onshore Sandstone Aquifer
Geophysical Journal International, 172, 1, 214-225, 2008.
Spetzler Jespe, Xue Ziqiu, Saito Hideki, Nobuoka Dai, Azuma Hiroyuki, Nishizawa Osamu


We present a case study of time-lapse seismic monitoring of carbon dioxide (CO2) injection by traveltime delay tomography. Unlike standard tomography based on the ray theory, this tomographic method applies the 3-D finite-frequency wavefield theory which in seismology is known as the banana?doughnut theory. To monitor 4-D changes in the subsurface during CO2 injection, crosswell seismic data were measured before the injection was initiated and after injection of 3200, 6200 and 10 400 tons CO2 into a porous reservoir sandstone at 1100 m depth. The estimated tomographic velocity images compiled with the finite-frequency wave theory show a clear time-lapse velocity anomaly on the order of -18 percent below the CO2 injection well head which is in agreement with 4-D sonic logging.

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