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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of shale gas storage: Implications for shale gas exploration in China

TLDR
In this paper, two models were proposed to predict the variation of gas sorption capacity and total gas content over geologic time as a function of burial history, and the results showed that the changes in GSC of organic-rich shales are quite low at an elevated temperature and pressure and with the presence of moisture.
Abstract
This article reviews the mechanisms of shale gas storage and discusses the major risks or uncertainties for shale gas exploration in China. At a given temperature and pressure, the gas sorption capacities of organic-rich shales are primarily controlled by the organic matter richness but may be significantly influenced by the type and maturity of the organic matter, mineral composition (especially clay content), moisture content, pore volume and structure, resulting in different ratios of gas sorption capacity (GSC) to total organic carbon content for different shales. In laboratory experiments, the GSC of organic-rich shales increases with increasing pressure and decreases with increasing temperature. Under geologic conditions (assuming hydrostatic pressure gradient and constant thermal gradient), the GSC increases initially with depth due to the predominating effect of pressure, passes through a maximum, and then decreases because of the influence of increasing temperature at greater depth. This pattern of variation is quite similar to that observed for coals and is of great significance for understanding the changes in GSC of organic-rich shales over geologic time as a function of burial history. At an elevated temperature and pressure and with the presence of moisture, the gas sorption capacities of organic-rich shales are quite low. As a result, adsorption alone cannot protect sufficient gas for high-maturity organic-rich shales to be commercial gas reservoirs. Two models are proposed to predict the variation of GSC and total gas content over geologic time as a function of burial history. High contents of free gas in organic-rich shales can be preserved in relatively closed systems. Loss of free gas during postgeneration uplift and erosion may result in undersaturation (the total gas contents lower than the sorption capacity) and is the major risk for gas exploration in marine organic-rich shales in China.

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Citations
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Geological controls on methane adsorption capacity of Lower Permian transitional black shales in the Southern North China Basin, Central China: Experimental results and geological implications

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effect of organic matter, mineral compositions, pore properties, temperature, and pressure on the methane adsorption capacity of transitional black shales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gas storage and controlling factors in an over-mature marine shale: A case study of the Lower Cambrian Lujiaping shale in the Dabashan arc-like thrust–fold belt, southwestern China

TL;DR: In this article, the authors performed petrological, geochemical, and petrophysical experiments on shale samples from the Lujiaping Formation and found that the organic fraction contribution to micropores and mesopores is highly significant.
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Warm-humid paleoclimate control of salinized lacustrine organic-rich shale deposition in the Oligocene Hetaoyuan Formation of the Biyang Depression, East China

TL;DR: Based on X-ray diffraction, organic and inorganic petrologic and stable isotopic analyses, paleoenvironment, paleoclimate and hydrocarbon potential of the lacustrine organic-rich shales in the Oligocene Hetaoyuan Formation were investigated in this paper.
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The effect of tectonic deformation and preservation condition on the shale pore structure using adsorption-based textural quantification and 3D image observation

TL;DR: In this article, two sets of shales with similar mineral compositions and total organic carbon (TOC) content were used to evaluate the response of pore structure to tectonic deformation through gas adsorption, FE-SEM, and Nano-CT.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Unconventional shale-gas systems: The Mississippian Barnett Shale of north-central Texas as one model for thermogenic shale-gas assessment

TL;DR: In this article, the authors estimate that the Barnett Shale has a total generation potential of about 609 bbl of oil equivalent/ac-ft or the equivalent of 3657 mcf/acft (84.0 m 3 /m 3 ).
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphology, Genesis, and Distribution of Nanometer-Scale Pores in Siliceous Mudstones of the Mississippian Barnett Shale

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used scanning electron microscopy to characterize the pore system in the Barnett Shale of the Fort Worth Basin, Texas, showing that the pores in these rocks are dominantly nanometer in scale (nanopores).
Journal ArticleDOI

Fractured shale-gas systems

TL;DR: The first commercial United States natural gas production (1821) came from an organic-rich Devonian shale in the Appalachian basin this article, which is a continuous-type biogenic (predominant), thermogenic, or combined biogenic-thermogenic gas accumulations characterized by widespread gas saturation, subtle trapping mechanisms, seals of variable lithology, and relatively short hydrocarbon migration distances.
Journal ArticleDOI

The importance of shale composition and pore structure upon gas storage potential of shale gas reservoirs

TL;DR: The effect of shale composition and fabric upon pore structure and CH 4 sorption is investigated for potential shale gas reservoirs in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin (WCSB) as mentioned in this paper.
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