Abstract:
The inversion of petrophysical data can image the microscopic fracture structures inside rocks, revealing the evolutionary patterns of fractures within rocks and soil with changes in external environments. Hence, it is an intuitive and reliable method for investigating the mechanisms of deep geotechnical disasters. This study presented a petrophysical data acquisition system and resistivity-based forward modeling and inversion algorithms. Based on the above, this study conducted numerical simulations of 2D and 3D inversion imaging of petrophysical data. As indicated by the numerical simulation results, 2D inversion imaging can characterize millimeter-scale rock fractures with high/low resistivities, whereas 3D inversion imaging can accurately locate and effectively identify millimeter-scale fractures and vugs with high/low resistivities. Moreover, data measurement and inversion imaging were conducted on rock samples subjected to microwave-induced fracturing in three states: heated sandstone before failure, sandstone heated to a molten state, and molten sandstone in a cooled state, preliminarily revealing the variation patterns of sandstone fractures under microwave heating. Overall, this study provides a novel method for exploring the mechanisms of deep geotechnical disasters.