Effect of a discrete three-phase methane equilibrium zone on the bottom-simulating reflection

Marine gas hydrates are stable under conditions of low temperature and high pressure in the upper few hundreds of meters below the seafloor in a variety of geological setting. At a discrete horizon where thermodynamically favored phase switches from hydrate to gas, a characteristic seismic reflectio...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shushtarian, Arash
Other Authors: Daigle, Hugh
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
BSR
AVO
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/46022
https://doi.org/10.15781/T20863B19
id ftunivtexas:oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/46022
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spelling ftunivtexas:oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/46022 2023-05-15T17:12:00+02:00 Effect of a discrete three-phase methane equilibrium zone on the bottom-simulating reflection Shushtarian, Arash Daigle, Hugh 2016-12 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2152/46022 https://doi.org/10.15781/T20863B19 en eng doi:10.15781/T20863B19 http://hdl.handle.net/2152/46022 Methane hydrate Methane Hydrate Gas hydrate Bottom-simulating reflection BSR Synthetic seismograms Seismic Walker Ridge Three-phase zone Rock physics Amplitude versus offset AVO Thesis text 2016 ftunivtexas https://doi.org/10.15781/T20863B19 2020-12-23T22:06:33Z Marine gas hydrates are stable under conditions of low temperature and high pressure in the upper few hundreds of meters below the seafloor in a variety of geological setting. At a discrete horizon where thermodynamically favored phase switches from hydrate to gas, a characteristic seismic reflection referred as the bottom-simulating reflection (BSR) is produced. Furthermore, in sediments with a distribution of pore sizes, the gas and hydrate phases can coexist in pores of different sizes, giving a rise to three-phase equilibrium zone. This three-phase zone causes the BSR to have distinct characteristics that differ from those observed with a discrete phase boundary. The main objective of this thesis is to model the seismic response of a potential three-phase zone at the Walker Ridge Block 313H in the northern Gulf of Mexico. I modeled the BSR arising from this three-phase zone and analyzed the characteristics of the BSR and their relationships to the thickness and phase saturation within the three-phase zone. This was done by determining the elastic properties of the formation via rock physics models and their mathematical convolution with a seismic wavelet to create synthetic seismograms. Results show that the main factor for the intensity of the BSR is the abundance of the free gas in the three-phase zone. Free gas saturation as low as 5% in the three-phase zone is enough to make the BSR visible in synthetic seismograms regardless of the hydrate saturation. Results of this thesis are significant for resource prospecting based on seismic data, drilling hazard identification, as well as the importance of hydrate as a potential source of energy and its influence on the global climate. For seismic prospecting, the presence of a three-phase zone inferred from BSR characteristic indicates the minimum methane flux into the base of the hydrate stability zone, and can be used to infer whether sufficient methane is available to form hydrate. For drilling hazard identification, the BSR characteristic indicates a possible shallower occurrence of gas than would be estimated under the assumption of a discrete phase boundary. Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering Thesis Methane hydrate The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks Walker Ridge ENVELOPE(168.367,168.367,-72.567,-72.567)
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivtexas
language English
topic Methane hydrate
Methane
Hydrate
Gas hydrate
Bottom-simulating reflection
BSR
Synthetic seismograms
Seismic
Walker Ridge
Three-phase zone
Rock physics
Amplitude versus offset
AVO
spellingShingle Methane hydrate
Methane
Hydrate
Gas hydrate
Bottom-simulating reflection
BSR
Synthetic seismograms
Seismic
Walker Ridge
Three-phase zone
Rock physics
Amplitude versus offset
AVO
Shushtarian, Arash
Effect of a discrete three-phase methane equilibrium zone on the bottom-simulating reflection
topic_facet Methane hydrate
Methane
Hydrate
Gas hydrate
Bottom-simulating reflection
BSR
Synthetic seismograms
Seismic
Walker Ridge
Three-phase zone
Rock physics
Amplitude versus offset
AVO
description Marine gas hydrates are stable under conditions of low temperature and high pressure in the upper few hundreds of meters below the seafloor in a variety of geological setting. At a discrete horizon where thermodynamically favored phase switches from hydrate to gas, a characteristic seismic reflection referred as the bottom-simulating reflection (BSR) is produced. Furthermore, in sediments with a distribution of pore sizes, the gas and hydrate phases can coexist in pores of different sizes, giving a rise to three-phase equilibrium zone. This three-phase zone causes the BSR to have distinct characteristics that differ from those observed with a discrete phase boundary. The main objective of this thesis is to model the seismic response of a potential three-phase zone at the Walker Ridge Block 313H in the northern Gulf of Mexico. I modeled the BSR arising from this three-phase zone and analyzed the characteristics of the BSR and their relationships to the thickness and phase saturation within the three-phase zone. This was done by determining the elastic properties of the formation via rock physics models and their mathematical convolution with a seismic wavelet to create synthetic seismograms. Results show that the main factor for the intensity of the BSR is the abundance of the free gas in the three-phase zone. Free gas saturation as low as 5% in the three-phase zone is enough to make the BSR visible in synthetic seismograms regardless of the hydrate saturation. Results of this thesis are significant for resource prospecting based on seismic data, drilling hazard identification, as well as the importance of hydrate as a potential source of energy and its influence on the global climate. For seismic prospecting, the presence of a three-phase zone inferred from BSR characteristic indicates the minimum methane flux into the base of the hydrate stability zone, and can be used to infer whether sufficient methane is available to form hydrate. For drilling hazard identification, the BSR characteristic indicates a possible shallower occurrence of gas than would be estimated under the assumption of a discrete phase boundary. Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering
author2 Daigle, Hugh
format Thesis
author Shushtarian, Arash
author_facet Shushtarian, Arash
author_sort Shushtarian, Arash
title Effect of a discrete three-phase methane equilibrium zone on the bottom-simulating reflection
title_short Effect of a discrete three-phase methane equilibrium zone on the bottom-simulating reflection
title_full Effect of a discrete three-phase methane equilibrium zone on the bottom-simulating reflection
title_fullStr Effect of a discrete three-phase methane equilibrium zone on the bottom-simulating reflection
title_full_unstemmed Effect of a discrete three-phase methane equilibrium zone on the bottom-simulating reflection
title_sort effect of a discrete three-phase methane equilibrium zone on the bottom-simulating reflection
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/46022
https://doi.org/10.15781/T20863B19
long_lat ENVELOPE(168.367,168.367,-72.567,-72.567)
geographic Walker Ridge
geographic_facet Walker Ridge
genre Methane hydrate
genre_facet Methane hydrate
op_relation doi:10.15781/T20863B19
http://hdl.handle.net/2152/46022
op_doi https://doi.org/10.15781/T20863B19
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