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Modeling of Resistivity and Acoustic Borehole Logging Measurements Using Finite Element Methods

  • Book

  • May 2021
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5137671

Modeling of Resistivity and Acoustic Borehole Logging Measurements Using Finite Element Methods provides a comprehensive review of different resistivity and sonic logging instruments used within the oil industry, along with precise and solid mathematical descriptions of the physical equations and corresponding FE formulations that govern these measurements. Additionally, the book emphasizes the main modeling considerations that one needs to incorporate into the simulations in order to obtain reliable and accurate results. Essentially, the formulations and methods described here can also be applied to simulate on-surface geophysical measurements such as seismic or marine controlled-source electromagnetic (CSEM) measurements.

Simulation results obtained using FE methods are superior. FE methods employ a mathematical terminology based on FE spaces that facilitate the design of sophisticated formulations and implementations according to the specifics of each problem. This mathematical FE framework provides a highly accurate, robust, and flexible unified environment for the solution of multi-physics problems. Thus, readers will benefit from this resource by learning how to make a variety of logging simulations using a unified FE framework.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Part I: Electromagnetics2. Maxwell's Equations and Variational Formulations3. Modeling of Resistivity Geophysical Measurements

Part II: Acoustics4. Linear Acoustics in Fluids and Solids and Variational Formulations5. Numerical Modeling of Borehole Sonic Measurements

Part III: Advanced Modeling Topics6. Attenuation Model in Anelastic Materials7. Absorbing Boundary Conditions8. Linear Solvers9. Parallel Implementation10. Inverse Problems

Authors

David Pardo Research Professor, Basque Center for Applied Mathematics (BCAM), Ikerbasque, University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU, Spain. David Pardo is a Research Professor at Ikerbasque, the University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU, and the Basque Center for Applied Mathematics (BCAM). He has published over 160 research articles and he has given over 260 presentations. He is now the PI of the research group on Applied Mathematical Modeling, Statistics, and Optimization (MATHMODE).
His research interests include computational electromagnetics, petroleum-engineering applications (borehole simulations), adaptive finite-element and discontinuous Petrov-Galerkin methods, multigrid solvers, image restoration algorithms, and multiphysics and inverse problems. Pawel J. Matuszyk Research Development and Design Scientist, Baker Hughes Company, Houston, TX, USA. Pawel J. Matuszyk is Research Scientist at Baker Hughes working on acoustics borehole devices, Houston, TX, USA. Hes has over eighteen years of experience in academic and private industry research environments. Strong theoretical background in the field of mathematics and physics coupled with extensive programming skills plus expertise in analytical and numerical modeling of complex problems in mechanics and acoustics. Hands-on experience in designing sonic logging tools for the oil & gas industry. Expert in programming (Fortran, C/C++, Matlab) and finite element analysis. The academic background encompasses nine years of teaching experience. Self-motivated, methodical, persistent, and passionate about solving challenging scientific and engineering problems. Vladimir Puzyrev Senior Research Fellow at the Curtin University Oil and Gas Innovation Centre and the School of Earth and Planetary Sciences of Curtin University, Australia.. Vladimir Puzyrev is a Senior Research Fellow at the Curtin University Oil and Gas Innovation Centre and the School of Earth and Planetary Sciences of Curtin University, Australia. His research interests include applications of artificial intelligence and deep learning in geosciences, as well as computational electromagnetics, sparse linear solvers, and high-performance computing. Carlos Torres-Verdin Professor in Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, USA. Carlos Torres-Verd�n is Professor in Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin. He is worldwide expert in the area of characterizing the Earth�s subsurface via different numerical methods. Research Areas: Static and Dynamic Formation Evaluation, Borehole Geophysics, Rock Physics, Petrophysics, Well Logging, Reservoir Geophysics, Integrated Geological-Geophysical-Flow Description of Reservoirs, Signal Processing, Inverse Problems. Myung Jin Nam Professor, Department of Energy and Mineral Resources Engineering, Sejong University, Seoul, South Korea. Myung Jin Nam is a professor at Sejong University, Seoul, South Korea at the Department of Energy and Mineral Resources Engineering. His areas of expertise include Modeling and Simulation, Optimization, Numerical Analysis, Applied and Computational Mathematics, Simulation, and Geophysical Applications. Victor M. Calo Professor of Applied Geology, Curtin University, Australia. Victor M. Calo is a Professor of Applied Geology at Curtin University, Australia. Dr Calo holds the CSIRO Professorial Chair in Computational Geoscience and is a highly cited researcher who is actively involved in disseminating knowledge: Dr Calo has authored 160+ peer-reviewed publications. Dr Calo's research Interests include modelling and simulation of geomechanics, fluid dynamics, flow in porous media, phase separation, fluid-structure interaction, solid mechanics, and high-performance computing.