Sand production in an offshore hydrocarbon wells poses significant operational and integrity challenges, particularly in deviated wells, where complex flow geometries intensify particle transport and erosion risks. The traditional sand-monitoring method utilizes stationary acoustic sensors attached to the production flowline at the surface. However, these sensors provide limited spatial coverage and intermittent measurements, restricting their ability to detect early sanding onset or precisely localize sanding intervals. By combining with vertical seismic profiling (VSP), Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) delivers continuous, high-density data along the entire length of the wellbore and is increasingly recognized as a powerful diagnostic tool for real-time downhole monitoring. This study presents a field application of DAS-VSP for detecting and characterizing sand transport in a deviated offshore production well equipped with 350 distributed fiber-optic channels spanning 0–1983 m true vertical depth (TVD) at 8 m spacing. A multistage workflow was developed, including SEGY ingestion and shot merging, channel and time window selection, trace normalization, and low-pass filtering below 20 Hz. Multi-domain signal analysis, such as RMS energy, spike-based time-domain attributes, FFT, PSD spectral characterization, and time–frequency decomposition, were used to isolate the characteristic im-pulsive low-frequency (<20 Hz) signatures associated with sand impact. An adaptive thresholding and event-clustering scheme was then applied to discriminate sanding bursts from background noise and integrate their acoustic energy over depth. The processed DAS section revealed distinct, depth-localized sand ingress zones within the production interval (1136–1909 m TVD). The derived sand log provided a quantitative measure of sand intensity variations along the deviated wellbore, with normalized RMS amplitudes ranging from 0.039 to 1.000 a.u., a mean value of 0.235 a.u., and 137 analyzed channels within the production interval. These results indicate that sand production is highly clustered within discrete depth intervals, offering new insights into sand–fluid interactions during steady-state flow. Overall, the findings confirm that DAS-VSP enables continuous real-time monitoring of the sanding behavior with a far greater depth resolution than conventional tools. This approach supports proactive sand management strategies, enhances well-integrity decision-making, and underscores the potential of DAS to evolve into a standard surveillance technology for hydrocarbon production wells.
Asfha et al. (Fri,) studied this question.