Summary
Borehole-image logs, which are produced by tools being lowered into a well,
provide oriented electrical and acoustic maps of the rocks and fluids
encountered in the borehole. Electrical borehole images in water-based
(conducting) and oil-based (nonconducting) muds are generated from electrodes
arranged in fixed patterns on pads that are pressed against the borehole wall.
Depending on the borehole diameter, gaps nearly always occur between pads.
Because of these gaps, it is common to have nonimaged parts of the borehole
wall.
Full-bore images are complete, 360° views of the borehole wall. They are
generated by "filling in the gaps" between the pads in borehole-image logs.
This method uses the Filtersim algorithm of multipoint statistics (MPS) to
generate models, or realizations. Measured (incomplete) borehole images
themselves are used as "training images." Recorded data are perfectly honored
(i.e., the models are conditioned to the real data). Gaps are filled with
patterns similar to those seen elsewhere in the log. Patterns in the gaps match
the edges of the pads. The frequency distribution of continuously variable
pixel colors in the gaps matches the distribution of pixel colors in the
measured images.
Full-bore images facilitate visualization and interpretation of
borehole-image logs in any lithology, although case studies shown in this paper
are developed in vuggy and fractured rocks. These images can be used to draw
closed contours around electrically resistive or nonresistive patches in the
borehole wall. Full-bore images can be used to repair logs with bad electrodes,
low pad pressure, or poor acoustic reflections. Therefore, they can be used to
enhance any commercially available electrical or acoustic borehole images.
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
13 December 2008
- Meeting paper published:
16 March 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
16 December 2009
- Manuscript approved:
26 January 2010
- Published online:
17 March 2011
- Version of record:
6 April 2011