The triangle described in Section 3.3 provides rigorous bounds on
mechanical properties of porous media.
For plots in the (,
)-plane such as those included
in Figure 1(d) and Figures 3(b), 3(d), and 3(f),
some data points lie between the ideal patchy saturation line
and the Gassmann ideal lower bound. The relative position of the
data points may contain information about the fluid distribution.
Consider the case of a core sample that is nearly saturated, above 90% for
example.
If the weight of the core is used to determine the saturation but the
core contains a few gas bubbles, the background saturation will be
underestimated and the bubbles themselves represent patches.
This is an example of a material having a few isolated patches contained in
an otherwise homogeneous partially-saturated background.
Such data
would plot above but close to the Gassmann curve. In an analogous
case for field seismic data, the background
saturation may be known from measurements made at lower frequencies
or in a nearby region, and it may be possible to use such information
to determine the relative volume of patches.
For data lying in the middle (i.e.,
between the bounding curves), some assumptions about fluid
distribution could be made and
then various estimates about patchy volumes could be applied to
different models such as the Hashin-Shtrikman bounds (Hashin and
Shtrikman, 1962) or effective
medium theories. Exploration of these issues will be the subject of future
work.