Mathematically rigorous, computationally fast, and easy to use, this new approach to electromagnetic well logging gives the reservoir engineer a new dimension to MWD/LWD interpretation and tool design
Almost all publications on borehole electromagnetics deal with idealizations that are not acceptable physically. On the other hand, ‘exact models’ are only available through detailed finite element or finite difference analysis, and more often than not, simply describe case studies for special applications. In either case, the models are not available for general use and the value of the publications is questionable.
This new approach provides a rigorous, fully three-dimensional solution to the general problem, developed over almost two decades by a researcher familiar with practical applications and mathematical modeling. Completely validated against exact solutions and physics-based checks through over a hundred documented examples, the self-contained model (with special built-in matrix solvers and iteration algorithms) with a ‘plain English graphical user interface’ has been optimized to run extremely fast – seconds per run as opposed to minutes and hours – and then automatically presents all electric and magnetic field results through integrated three-dimensional color graphics.
In addition to state-of-the-art algorithms, basic ‘utility programs’ are also developed, such as simple dipole methods, Biot-Savart large diameter models, nonlinear phase and amplitude interpolation algorithms, and so on. Incredibly useful to oilfield practitioners, this volume is a must-have for serious professionals in the field, and all the algorithms have undergone a laborious validation process with real use in the field.
Over de auteur
Wilson C. Chin, who earned his Ph D from MIT and MSc from
Caltech, heads Strata Magnetic Software, LLC in Houston, which
develops mathematical modeling software for formation testing, MWD
telemetry, borehole electromagnetics, well logging, reservoir
engineering, and managed pressure drilling. He is the author of ten
books, more than 100 papers, and over forty patents.