The use of FWI in coal exploration
Mehdi Asgharzadeh, Maryam Bahri and Milovan Urosevic
ASEG Extended Abstracts
2018(1) 1 - 7
Published: 2018
Abstract
Seismic surveys are routinely used for building precise structural images of the coal bearing formations in Australia but coal production related hazards such as weak strata and zones with an increased gas content remain to be fully resolved by seismic measurements. One way of investigating these issues is through the application of Full Waveform Inversion (FWI) methods. To utilise the full power of these methods a high quality seismic dataset is needed. Such conditions are often met by 2D and 3D reflection seismic data acquired over coal seams in Bowen and Sydney basins. FWI can be used for a high resolution estimate of P- and S-wave velocities and the density that can also be translated into geotechnical parameters of interest to mining operations. In this study, we evaluate the applicability of FWI methods for estimating elastic parameters (P and S wave velocities and density) from the inversion of a synthetic seismic dataset that was recorded over the surface of a 2D earth model that represents subsurface geology in Goonyella coal mine in Queensland, Australia. We generated elastic synthetic shot records using finite difference algorithm and inverted these data back for model parameters to assess the potential of the FWI algorithm. Using only a short array of surface receivers (cheaper option), we show that the application of FWI method can still improve the original earth models towards the true solutions. We were also able to reconstruct the elastic boundaries for a major part of the subsurface models within the seismic bandwidth. Interpretation of the estimated parameters for coal mining objectives is then straightforwardhttps://doi.org/10.1071/ASEG2018abM1_3A
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