Cement Bond Evaluation Using Early Refracted Arrivals
Author(s)
Rao, Rama V.N.; Mandal, Batakrishna; Cheng, Arthur C. H.; Toksoz, M. Nafi
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Other Contributors
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Earth Resources Laboratory
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Show full item recordAbstract
The cement bond evaluation tool is a device used to examine the integrity of cement
bonding to the casing. A conceptual tool operating between 80-200 kHz is considered
here, with a transmitter and two receivers, oriented parallel to the axis of the borehole
and next to the casing. The compressional head wave in the casing, excited by
the transmitter, will be the first arrival to be measured by the two receivers in most
situations. With both receivers on the same side of the transmitter, the attenuation of
this wave in traveling between the two receivers is dependent on the properties of the
medium immediately outside the casing. The radially layered borehole was modeled as a
layered plane medium for large operating frequency. A spectral integral approach (complete wave synthesis) was used to compute the response at the receiver locations, which then provided attenuations. Different parameters, such as transducer separation (1-12 in), annulus thickness (0-6 in), annulus impedance (free pipe to good cement), casing thickness (0.25-0.45 in), standoff distance (0.5-1 in) and source frequency (80-200 kHz) were varied in the evaluation of the operation of the tool. The parameter studies based on the theoretical computations revealed that free pipe could be distinguished from the presence of cement in a variety of situations. Additionally, lower bounds on receiver separations are given for reliable operation of the tool.
Date issued
1997Publisher
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Earth Resources Laboratory
Series/Report no.
Earth Resources Laboratory Industry Consortia Annual Report;1997-09