会议专题

Comparison of two complimentary measurements: Sonic Fast-Shear Azimuth and breakout directions for stress estimation

We compare two stress models, “subsidiary and “borehole, as mechanisms responsible for, respectively, the sonic fast-shear azimuth (FSA) and breakout directions for arbitrary well orientations. We show that the sonic FSA coincides with the “maximum subsidiary principal stress as the dipole shear is unaffected by borehole stress concentrations, and is, therefore, directly related to the relative deviatoric stress tensor described by the orientation of σ h and ellipsoid factor R. In contrast, the breakout orientation, controlled by borehole stresses, occurs at a location where the compressive principal stress in the borehole tangential plane is maximum. We show that, to a first-order approximation, the breakout directions are also related to the orientation of σ h and R as for normally pressured to slightly overpressured conditions, the breakout orientation is not very sensitive to the borehole mud pressure. Results indicate that, for arbitrary well orientations, sonic FSA and breakout direction are not necessarily at 90° of each other. This analysis implies that the sonic FSA, from stress-induced origin, is theoretically a better measurement to estimate the relative deviatoric stress tensor, and FSA observations from wells with at least two different orientations can be used to estimate the orientation of σ h and R. To a first-order approximation, the same can be done using breakout orientations.

Romain Prioul Haitao Sun

Schlumberger-Doll Research, Cambridge, MA, USA

国际会议

The Fifth International Symposium on In-situ Rock Stress(第五届国际岩石应力研讨会)

北京

英文

275-282

2010-08-25(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)