2019_EJRNL_PP_PAULO_ROBERTO_MOURA_DE_CARVALHO_1.pdf
Terbatas  
» Gedung UPT Perpustakaan
Terbatas  
» Gedung UPT Perpustakaan
Accurate seafloormaps are critical in offshore petroleumprojects. Almost all subsurfacemodelingworkflows use
these maps: for example, pore pressure models and reservoir geomechanics. These studies generally involve
sumsof properties along the vertical, consequently, noise or acquisition artifacts at the seafloormap tend to propagate
and even amplify in the subsequent models. Seafloor maps are normally acquired by sound-sensing technology
and related procedures, which expectedly introduce noise and artifacts. Moving window filters, such as
average and median filters, are easy to use and fast to compute, hence they are used very often by interpreters
to make geologically sound horizons. However such filters are unable to discern noise, artifacts and signal,
resulting in the compromise of actual information. Filtering in the frequency domain can pose difficulties
when noise, artifacts and geological information overlap in the frequency domain, as the total energy tend to concentrate
in the lowest frequencies. Factorial kriging (FK) is a spatial filter that yields separate estimations, each
corresponding to a variogram nested structure. FK relies on the principle that structurally complex information
is a sumof independent information componentswhile the variogramis a clear and reliableway to select the frequency
ranges of each component. Hence, this method can effectively separate acquisition artifacts from seafloor
information based on their different spatial structuresmodeledwith variograms. Thiswork investigates an application
of FK for filtering of hard-edged (broadband) artifacts in post-processed interpreted seismic data. Differently
from random noise, artifacts are spatially correlated information components mixed with actual geologic
information. Initially, removal of the bathymetric trend makes the case stationary for a high-resolution variogram
map computed in the frequency domain via fast Fourier transform (FFT), which enables a full 2D variogram
modeling. Theoretical variogram surfaces are fit to the experimental variogram map, enabling the identification
and modeling of a set of nested variograms. The authors envisaged search strategies to select a small number of
informative samples to reduce kriging runtime and, at the same time, cover the necessary spatially correlated
variability. Aworkflowon a large seismic-derived seafloor 2Dmap is demonstrated, detailing each stepwith emphasis
on the sensitive variogram modeling step, followed by search strategy definition and choice of the
geology-bearing factors for seafloor restoration. Filtering in frequency domain was performed for comparison.
Results showed that broadband artifacts require a non-traditional approach to variogram modeling, which was
performed in a second FK runwith awholly newvariogrammodel. The filtering operations revealed seafloor features,
which were previously unseen in the original map, and the final result was similar to that obtained with
FFT. FK is a lossless filtering technique that is a highly effective method to remove acquisition footprints in
final grids and volumes in which acquisition geometry information is not available.