North Tech Breakfast: Hydraulic-fracture geometry characterization using low-frequency DAS signal* - Nov 6th

Sponsored by Anadarko and Quantico Energy Solutions

Meeting Location:

Anadarko Petroleum
1201 Lake Robbins Drive
The Woodlands, TX  77380

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Speaker: Ge Jin, ConocoPhillips 
Monitoring and diagnosing completion during hydraulic-fracturing operations provides insight into the fracture geometry, interwell frac hits, and connectivity. Conventional monitoring methods (microseismic, pressure gauges, tracers, etc.) can provide a range of information about the stimulated rock volume but may often be limited in detail or clouded by uncertainty. Utilization of distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) as a fracture monitoring tool is growing; however, most of the applications have been limited to acoustic frequency bands of the DAS recorded signal. In this paper, we demonstrate some examples of using the low-frequency band of DAS signal to constrain hydraulic-fracture geometry. DAS data were acquired in both offset horizontal and vertical monitor wells. In horizontal wells, DAS data record formation strain perturbation due to fracture propagation. Events like fracture opening and closing, stress shadow creation and relaxation, ball seat, and plug isolation can be clearly identified. In vertical wells, DAS response agrees well with collocated pressure and temperature gauges, and illuminates the vertical extent of hydraulic fractures. We show that DAS data in the low-frequency band is a powerful attribute to monitor small strain and temperature perturbation in or near the monitor wells. With different fibered monitor well design, we can measure the far-field fracture length, height, width, and density using crosswell DAS observations.

Speaker Biography: Ge Jin, ConocoPhillips 
Dr. Ge Jin works as a senior geophysicist in Subsurface Technology at ConocoPhillips. His research focuses on fiber-optic sensing data interpretation. He developed a series of applications that utilize Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) signal in the low-frequency band to characterize unconventional reservoirs. Dr. Jin obtained his Ph.D. in Geophysics from Columbia University in the City of New York, and hold dual B.S. in Geophysics and Computer Science from Peking University.

Breakfast will be available starting at 7:00 AM
Technical Talk will start at 7:30
Event will end by 8:30

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When
11/6/2018 7:30 AM - 8:30 AM
Central Standard Time

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