Published in

Society of Exploration Geophysicists, The Leading Edge, 6(33), p. 640-646, 2014

DOI: 10.1190/tle33060640.1

Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Geophysics, 4(81), p. D335-D344, 2016

DOI: 10.1190/geo2015-0383.1

Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Geophysics, 2(79), p. L13-L20, 2014

DOI: 10.1190/geo2013-0020.1

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Seismic attenuation in partially saturated rocks: Recent advances and future directions

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Biot’s equations of poroelasticity were solved to study the effects of fracture connectivity on S-wave attenuation caused by wave-induced fluid flow at the mesoscopic scale. The methodology was based on numerical quasi-static pure-shear experiments performed on models of water-saturated rocks containing pairs of either connected or unconnected fractures of variable inclination. Each model corresponded to a representative elementary volume (REV) of a periodic medium. Inertial terms were neglected and hence the observed attenuation was entirely due to wave-induced fluid flow at the mesoscopic scale. Our results indicate that when fractures are not connected, fluid flow in the embedding matrix governs S-wave attenuation, whereas fluid flow through highly permeable fractures, from one fracture into the other one, may dominate when fractures are connected. Each of these energy dissipation phenomena has a distinct characteristic frequency, with the S-wave attenuation peak associated with flow though connected fractures occurring at higher frequencies than that associated with flow in the embedding matrix. Exploring a range of geometric arrangements of either connected or unconnected fractures at different inclinations, we also observed that the magnitude of S-wave attenuation at both characteristic frequencies shows a strong dependence on fracture inclination. For comparison, we performed quasi-static uniaxial compressibility tests to compute P-wave attenuation in the same models. Our results indicate that the attenuation patterns of S-waves tend to differ fundamentally from those of P-waves with respect to fracture inclination. The attenuation characteristics of P- and S-waves in fractured media are thus largely complementary. With respect to fracture connectivity, we observed that S-wave attenuation tends to follow a specific pattern, indeed more consistently than that of the P-waves. Our results point to the promising perspective of combining estimates of attenuation of P- and S-waves to infer information on fracture connectivity as well as on the effective permeability of fractured media.