Full Tensor Micro-Impedance Imaging
US-2015160365-A1 · Jun 11, 2015 · US
US9910180B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9910180-B2 |
| Application number | US-201214411500-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jun 29, 2012 |
| Priority date | Jun 29, 2012 |
| Publication date | Mar 6, 2018 |
| Grant date | Mar 6, 2018 |
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Various systems and methods for implementing and using a full tensor micro-impedance downhole imaging tool that includes downhole emitters that induce, at azimuthally-spaced positions on a borehole wall, fields having components in three different non-coplanar directions within a formation and directionally sensitive downhole sensors that sense the components caused by each emitter. The tool further includes a downhole controller that processes signals received from the directionally sensitive downhole sensors to provide a set of measurements representative of a 3×3 impedance tensor at each position.
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What is claimed is: 1. A downhole imaging tool that comprises: downhole emitters that sequentially induce, at azimuthally-spaced positions, a plurality of fields having components in non-coplanar directions within a formation; directionally sensitive downhole sensors that concurrently sense, in non-coplanar directions, the components caused by each emitter; and a downhole controller that processes signals received from the directionally sensitive downhole sensors to provide a plurality of measurement sets, wherein each measurement set is represented by an impedance tensor greater than 2×2 at each of said azimuthally spaced positions; wherein the controller derives a mud resistivity and a standoff distance, between the tool and a borehole, associated with a borehole depth and an azimuth angle. 2. The tool of claim 1 , wherein the impedance tensor is real-valued to indicate anisotropic resistivity or conductivity. 3. The tool of claim 1 , wherein the impedance tensor is imaginary-valued to indicate anisotropic electric permittivity. 4. The tool of claim 1 , wherein the impedance tensor is complex valued to indicate anisotropic resistivity and electric permittivity components. 5. The tool of claim 1 , wherein said plurality of fields are electrical fields. 6. The tool of claim 1 , wherein said plurality of fields are magnetic fields. 7. The tool of claim 1 , wherein the downhole emitters comprise three orthogonal coils. 8. The tool of claim 7 , wherein the downhole sensors comprise three orthogonal coils. 9. A downhole imaging tool that comprises: a tool body that moves along a borehole through a formation with sensing surfaces to measure formation impedance tensors as a function of borehole depths and azimuth angles, wherein each sensing surface comprises a set of electrodes with multiple orthogonal sensing electrodes that sequentially provide an electrical current and multiple orthogonal sensing electrodes that concurrently acquire a plurality of measurement sets for which each measurement set is representative of three linearly independent directional components of a resulting electrical field in the formation at the borehole depth and azimuth angle at which each measurement set is acquired; and a downhole controller that processes signals received from the sensing electrodes to provide a set of measurements represented by an impedance tensor greater than 2×2 at each of the borehole depths and azimuth angles; wherein the controller derives a mud resistivity and a standoff distance, between the tool and the borehole, associated with a borehole depth and an azimuth angle. 10. The tool of claim 9 , wherein the impedance tensor indicates anisotropic resistivity or conductivity. 11. The tool of claim 9 , wherein the impedance tensor indicates anisotropic electric permittivity. 12. The tool of claim 9 , wherein the impedance tensor is complex valued to indicate anisotropic resistivity and electric permittivity components. 13. The tool of claim 9 , further comprising: a plurality of downhole electrode sets; a downhole emitter electronics module coupled to the downhole controller; a downhole sensor electronics module coupled to the downhole controller; a switch coupled to the plurality of downhole electrode sets, the downhole controller, the downhole emitter electronics module and the downhole sensor electronics module; wherein the downhole controller commands the switch to selectively couple at least a first electrode set of the plurality of electrode sets to the emitter electronics module and operates the first electrode set as emitters; and wherein the downhole controller commands the switch to selectively couple at least a second electrode set of the plurality of electrode sets to the sensor electronics module and operates the second electrode set as the sensing electrodes. 14. The tool of claim 13 , further comprising: one or more focusing electrodes positioned adjacent to at least one signal electrode operating as an emitter and selectively shorted to said at least one signal electrode. 15. The tool of claim 9 , further comprising a computer system that receives and derives from the set of measurements one or more formation characteristics associated with the given borehole depth and azimuth angle and further presents to a user data representative of at least one of the one or more borehole characteristics. 16. An imaging method that comprises: lowering a downhole imaging tool into a borehole through a formation; at each of multiple azimuth angles on the borehole wall sequentially inducing fields having three linearly-independent directional components, one component per field, within a formation; detecting the directional field components, using linearly-independent directional downhole sensors that concurrently sense the components of each field, to obtain a plurality of measurement sets, wherein each measurement set is a function of azimuthal angle and depth in the borehole, and is further represented by an impedance tensor greater than 2×2; deriving from the measurement sets one or more formation characteristics, comprising a mud resistivity and a standoff distance, between the tool and the borehole, as a function of said azimuthal angle and depth in the borehole; and presenting to a user data representative of the one or more borehole characteristics. 17. The method of claim 16 , wherein the impedance tensor indicates anisotropic resistivity or conductivity. 18. The method of claim 16 , wherein the impedance tensor indicates anisotropic permittivity. 19. The method of claim 16 , wherein the impedance tensor is complex valued to indicate anisotropic resistivity and permittivity components. 20. The method of claim 16 , wherein the one or more formation characteristics comprise a characteristic selected from the group consisting of a vertical formation resistivity, one or more horizontal formation resistivities, a formation dip, and a formation strike.
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