Sonic Logging
Sonic Logging
The head waves in the borehole are the signals seen by the receivers.
The array of receivers see the signal at different times as they are at
different distances from the trans
Monopole source sonic waves
Fast (Hard) Formation Slow (Soft) Formation
Wellbore Compressional Wellbore Formation
wave
Headwaves Compressional
Formation wave
Headwave
Compressional Stoneley
Compressional Shear Stoneley wave wave
wave wave wave
c
Sin 𝜽c = C1 / C2 C1 < C2
6/12/2006
VP or Vs Vp , Vs > V mud
formation
4
Basic Sonic Theory - What & Why Sonic
E1 Est
AMPLITUDE
mitter Firing
tp ts tst
Pulse
Tran
Mechanical properties
Sanding, fracture, BH stability
Definition
The sonic log is a porosity log that measures interval transit time
(Δt) of a compressional sound wave traveling through one foot of
formation.
The sonic log device consists of one or more sound transmitters,
and two or more receivers.
Interval transit time is recorded in tracks #2 and #3. The interval
transit time is dependent upon both lithology and porosity.
Units and presentation
Curves recorded on acoustic logs may include the interval transit
time, and integrated travel time. The primary measurement of
interest will be the interval transit time (Δt), measured in
microseconds per foot (µsec/ft) which is the reciprocal of the
velocity of a compressional sound wave in feet per second.
The normal spacing between the transmitters and receivers is 3' - 5'.
Used for:
Correlation.
Porosity.
Lithology.
Seismic tie in / time-to-
depth conversion.
Long Spacing Sonic
The BHC tool is affected by near borehole altered zones hence a
longer spacing is needed with a larger depth of investigation.
The tool cannot be built with transmitters at each end like a BHC sonde,
hence there are two transmitters at the bottom.
The uses of this tool are the same as the BHC tool.
Array Sonic
• Multi-spacing digital tool.
Used for:
• Porosity.
• Lithology.
• Seismic tie in / time-to-depth conversion.
• Mechanical properties (from shear and compressional).
• Fracture identification (from shear and Stoneley).
• Permeability (from Stoneley).
DSI General
In a slow formation the shear wave from a monopole source never
creates a head wave.
Mud Mud
Compressional Shear
Shear Flexural
Flexural
Compressional wave wave
wave wave wave
wave
• Seismic.
• Porosity / Lithology.
• Gas shows.
DSI tool, modes & applications
Cartridge
Acoustic bandwidth 1 : Lower Dipole LD (slow & fast rocks)
13 ft - Dipole, Stoneley ts lower dipole plane->AVO,Mechpro
80 Hz to 5 kHz
2 : Upper Dipole UD (slow & fast rocks)
- High Freq.Monopole
ts upper dipole plane-AVO,Mechpro
8 kHz to 30 kHz
18 ft
11 ft to 3 : Stoneley, low Frequency Monopole
upper dipole
transmitte r 6 tst : permeability index Est : fracture
Receiver section 4 : P & S (fast) high frequency Monopole
42 in.
6 in.
tp & ts average : porosity,lithology
gas, Mechpro (Frachite, Sanding, …),
Isolation joint 11 ft to
3.5 ft
9 ft to upper dipole
monopole transmitter 11.5 ft to 5 : First motion detection FMD
dip ole6 tp : porosity, lithology
transmitter 11.5 ft to
lower dipole
lower
transmitter er
transmitt
6 : Expert (Both CRoss Dipole) GPIT
Transmitter section
16.5 ft
6ts both dipole planes Anisotropy
STC Processing
This type of processing is necessary to extract the shear and Stoneley
information from the waveform.
This means looking for the same part of the wave (e.g. shear) on each
wavetrain.
Once this has been done the transit time can be computed.
STC Computation
Varying moveout
0
Gamma Ray
Caliper
100
.50 100
100
Dtc
Delta-T Shear
Coherence
200
500
Dts Slowness Time Plane
Indicators 6 16 0 1. 1. 0 Projection
10200
10250
10300
10350
12
Borehole Effects 1
As the sonic tool is measuring the time for the signal to go from the
transmitter to the receiver there are two types of erroneous responses.
Cycle skipping
Road noise
This is noise at the receivers that is due to borehole environment and has
nothing to do with the signal being measured.
Borehole Effects 2
There are a number of borehole phenomena
which cause these effects:
Large holes - if the borehole diameter is very large the mud signal
may arrive at a receiver before the formation signal. The proper tool
set- up for each condition has to be picked before the job.
Caves
Mechanical properties:
Hard rock X X
Soft rock X
Fracture detection X X
Permeability X
Mechanical properties
A combination of compressional, shear and density measurements gives
the rocks' dynamic elastic moduli.
&applications
Sanding analysis
fracture height,
wellbore stability
6/12/2006
Vp / Vs as lithology indicator
19
14
6/12/2006
Unconsolidated
sediments
40
2.5
35
Vp / Vs
30 90
2.0
Wet
Dry
ø 80
S xo
Limestone gas
70
Anhydrite Gas
60
20
Dolomite 50
Salt 10
40
15