Figure 2-2 displays SEM synthetic seismograms at the two receivers, which are compared to the analytical solution provided by Julien Diaz (University of Pau, France). The results are in good agreement.
Benchmark 2: Simulation of wave propagation in a model consisting of two homogeneous poroelastic layers with discontinuous bulk & shear moduli and a jump in porosity (Figure 3-1).
The model dimensions are 4800 m x 4800 m, the source (cross) is located at x_s = (1600,2900) and the receivers (circles) at x_r1 = (2000,2934) and at x_r2 = (2000,1867), the top is a free surface and the remaining three edges are absorbing boundaries. The explosive source has a Ricker wavelet source time function with a dominant frequency of 15Hz.
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Figure 3. Simulation of wave propagation in a model consisting of two homogeneous poroelastic layers with discontinuous bulk & shear moduli and porosity. (1) Snapshot of the vertical-component displacement at t=0.9 s. The direct fast P (a), the reflected fast P (b), and the reflected fast P-to-S and fast P-to-slow P converted (c) waves (which overlap because they have similar wave speeds) can be observed in the upper layer, together with the direct slow P (d), the reflected slow P (e), the reflected slow P-to-S converted (f), and the reflected slow P-to-fast P converted (g) waves. We also observe the reflected fast P wave due to the free surface (h). In the lower layer, the transmitted fast P (i) and fast P-to-slow P converted (j) waves can be clearly identified, together with the transmitted slow P (k), slow P-to-S converted (l) and slow P-to-fast P converted (m) waves. Note that the transmitted fast P-to-S converted wave, which presents a low amplitude, is not visible.
(2) Vertical-component velocity seismograms at receivers 1 & 2 (SEM: solid black line, analytical solution: dashed red line). We use domain composition to accommodate the first-order discontinuity in porosity in the Biot formulation.
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Figure 3-2 shows the SEM synthetic seismograms at the two receivers, which are in good agreement with the analytical solution provided by Julien Diaz (University of Pau, France).
2-D Sample applications:
Compacted sedimentary layer: Simulation of wave propagation in a water layer over a compacted sedimentary layer with variable porosity (Figure 4).
The model dimensions are 4800 m x 4800 m, the source (cross) is located at x_s = (1600,2900) and the receivers (circles) at x_r1 = (2000,2934) and at x_r2 = (2000,1867).
The top is a free surface and the remaining three edges are absorbing boundaries. The explosive source has a Ricker wavelet source time function with a dominant frequency of 15 Hz.
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Figure 4 . Simulation of wave propagation in a water layer over a compacted sedimentary layer with variable porosity.
(1) Snapshot of the vertical-component displacement at t=1.08 s. We can observe the direct P (a) and the reflected P (b) waves in the acoustic domain, the transmitted fast P (c), the fast P-to-S (d), and the fast P-to-slow P (e) waves in the poroelastic domain.
(2) Porosity profile in the poroelastic layer.
(3) Vertical-component velocity seismograms at receivers 1 & 2 (compacted sediment layer: solid black line, constant porosity of~0.4: solid red line).
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Figure 4-3 shows SEM synthetic seismograms at the two receivers. A comparison is made when the poroelastic lower layer presents a variable porosity and when porosity is kept constant. The dependency of phase velocity with porosity can be appreciated.
Buried object detection: Acoustic detection of buried objects is of interest in the context of landmine identification (Zeng & Liu 2001, Xiang & Sabatier 2003).
We designed three models to evaluate the signature of a purely elastic buried object in three types of environments (Figures 5-1 to 5-3):
- Model 1: acoustic layer on top of a poroelastic medium with a porosity gradient and no viscous damping.
- Model 2: acoustic layer on top of a poroelastic medium with a porosity gradient and viscous damping.
- Model 3: acoustic layer on top of an elastic medium.
We use a Ricker source time function with a dominant frequency of 5 kHz.
The source is located in the acoustic domain, and we place 20 receivers close to the bottom of this domain. The model dimensions are 10 m x 8m.
The differences between synthetic seismograms for Models 1, 2 and 3 with and without the buried metal object illustrate the corresponding seismic signatures (Figures 5-4 to 5-6).
The differential seismograms for Models 1 and 2 illustrate the impact of viscous damping on the slow compressional waves, which are clearly suppressed in Model 2. The signature of the object in differential seismograms for elastic Model 3 is noticeably different from that in the poroelastic models..
Figure 5 . Simulation of wave propagation in a model consisting of a water layer over a poroelastic layer, or an elastic layer, with a buried metal object (yellow rectangle). The source (cross) is located at x_s = (2.5,4.0) and 20 receivers (circles) are evenly located between x_{r1} = (4.0,3.5) and at x_{r20} = (8.0,3.5).
Snapshot of the vertical-component displacement at t=0.002 s for (1) Model 1: porosity gradient and no viscous damping, (2) Model 2: porosity gradient and viscous damping and (3) Model 3: elastic.
We can observe the direct P (a) and the reflected P (b) waves in the acoustic domain, the transmitted fast P (c), the P-to-S converted (d), and the fast P-to-slow P converted (e) waves in the poroelastic domain, plus waves reflected by the elastic object (f).
(4) Difference between vertical-component velocity seismograms at receivers 1-20 for Model 1 with and without the buried metal object. These differential seismograms highlight the signature of the buried target.
(5) Difference between vertical-component velocity seismograms at receivers 1-20 for Model 2 with and without the buried metal object.
(6) Difference between vertical-component velocity seismograms at receivers 1-20 for elastic Model 3 with and without the buried metal object.
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