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 SP BASICS During the early days of resistivity logging, it was
                  observed that natural potentials existed in boreholes. These
                  are known as spontaneous potentials, or SP. A recording of
                  the changes in SP versus depth gives the SP log. The measurement
                  is very simple: the potential difference between an electrode
                  M on the probe and a reference electrode N placed at the surface
                  is measured with a voltmeter. The voltage is
                  quite small, ranging from +50 to about –200 millivolts.
  
				This is a passive measurement. That
                  is, no energy is provided by the logging tool. There is no
                  SP until the borehole is drilled and filled with conductive
                  muds. This contrasts with telluric currents caused by solar
                  radiation and Northern Lights, and man-made currents from power
                  lines, cathodic protection of pipelines, and welding equipment
                  grounded to the rig while logging proceeds. All these currents
                  can persist without a borehole, but more importantly, can cause
                  anomalies on the SP log, and in some cases rendering it useless.
				
 References:
 1. The SP Log: Theoretical Analysis and Principles of Interpretation,
 H.G. Doll, AIME, 1948.
 
 2. SP Log in Shaly Sands,
 H.G. Doll, JPT, 1950.
 
 3.  Natural Potentials in Well Logging
 W.D. Mounce, W. M. Rust, Jr.,  AIME, 1948
 
  SP THEORY The SP is the result of several electromotive
                  forces: shale membrane potential Em, liquid-junction potential
                  Ej, and electro-kinetic potential Ek. The measured SP is the
				sum of these three voltages.
  Shales are permeable to sodium ions
                  (Na+) but impervious to chloride ions (Cl-). When a shale separates
                  two sodium chloride solutions of different concentration (the
                  mud in the borehole and the water in the formation), sodium
                  ions migrate by diffusion from the higher concentration into
                  the lower concentration. This movement of positive charges
                  builds up a voltage known as shale potential or membrane potential
                  Em.   When two sodium chloride solutions
                  of different concentration are separated by a semi-permeable
                  partition that permits the passage of ions from one side to
                  the other, but prevents bulk mixing of the two solutions, ions
                  migrate by diffusion from the concentrated solution to the
                  dilute solution. This happens at the boundary between the invaded
                  and un-invaded zones. The negative chloride ions have a greater
                  mobility than the positive sodium ions. There is a net transfer
                  of negative electric charges from the more concentrated solution
                  to the less concentrated. The resulting electromotive force
                  is known as the liquid-junction potential Ej.  
				The passage of an electrolyte through
                  a porous medium also produces an electromotive force, called
                  electro-kinetic potential, Ek, between any two points along
                  the electrolyte flow path. For example, an electro-kinetic
                  potential is developed when mud filtrate passes through a mud
                  cake into the formation. The value of this potential is small
                  and is commonly disregarded in electrical logging.  
			The current loops shown below circulate
                  between shale, borehole, invaded zone, and un-invaded zone
                  and back to the shale. They represent the sum of membrane and
                  liquid junction potentials, which is known as the electrochemical
                  component of the SP. The curve to the left is
                  the corresponding SP curve as measured by a real tool. The
                  square static SP is the theoretical shape of a perfect SP curve.
				 
				 Current path is between mud in borehole,
                  formation water and nearest shale. Static SP is
 theoretical
                  value; smooth curve shows actual values recorded. High
				resistivity in any part of
 the circuit reduces the SP. Low contrast in the salinity between
				mud and formation
 reduce the SP value.
  The numerical values of the electromotive
                  forces depend on the type and quantity of dissolved salts.
                  The electrochemical component of the SP is defined mathematically
                  by: 
			         1:  Ec = Em + Ej = –K * log(Aw / Amf)
			
 Aw and Amf are
                  the chemical activities of the formation water and mud filtrate,
                  respectively. K is a factor that depends on the temperature.
                  For clean sands and sodium chloride solutions, K ranges from
                  67 millivolts at 50 F to 123 millivolts at 300 F.
 
			In situations with pure sodium chloride (NaCL) solutions,
			the SP equation becomes:2:  SP = –K * log(Rmf /
			Rw)
 
 Rw and Rmf are the water and mud filtrate resistivity at formation
			temperature respectively.
 
 K is reduced
                  when the permeable beds contain dispersed clay, so the SP is
			sometimes used as  shale indicator.
 
				 SP Circuit Diagram. The M electrode
                  is the same electrode as the M on the normal
 measurement. N
                  is a separate grounding electrode thrown into the mud pit or
                  clamped
 to the casing in dry or frozen territory.
 
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