The recognition of fluid-filled channels in cased holes is significant for the safety production of oil and gas wells.
The fluid-filled channel at the cement-formation boundary is more difficult to be detected than that at the casingcement
boundary. To solve the key technical problem, a dual-frequency acoustic measurement method is proposed
to obtain the cementation state of the two interfaces at the same time. The related theory is that the casing
wave amplitude from the low-frequency source is sensitive to the channel at both two boundaries, but that from
the high-frequency source is only sensitive to the channel at the casing-cement boundary. Therefore, high amplitudes
of the casing waves from both two sources represent a channel on the casing-cement boundary, high
amplitude from the low-frequency source but low amplitude from the high-frequency source represent a channel
on the cement-formation boundary, and low amplitudes from both two sources represent no channel.
Subsequently, numerical simulations are performed to examine the effects of several critical parameters on the
dual-frequency acoustic measurement. The results show that the best combination of the measurement system is
one low-frequency source at 10 kHz together with one high-frequency source at 150 kHz. For the low-frequency
source, the casing wave amplitude increases obviously with the increasing channel thickness, regardless of the
channel position. The increase of the cement thickness and the casing size damps out the casing wave. For the
high-frequency source, the casing wave amplitude is little affected by these parameters except for the casingcement
channel. Moreover, the dual-frequency acoustic measurement method is suitable for common sandstone
and shale formations. The findings of this study provide a theoretical foundation for next-generation
cementing-quality-evaluation tool development.
Perpustakaan Digital ITB