Investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution

Methane adsorption is a critical assessment of the gas storage capacity (GSC) of shales with geological conditions. Although the related research of marine shales has been well-illustrated, the methane adsorption of marine-continental transitional (MCT) shales is still ambiguous. In this study, a me...

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Main Authors: Lu, Chen-Gang, Xiao, Xian-Ming, Xue, Zhen-Qian, Chen, Zhang-Xin, Dong, Yin-Tao, Feng, Yue, Li, Gang
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181590
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1815902024-12-13T15:34:28Z Investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution Lu, Chen-Gang Xiao, Xian-Ming Xue, Zhen-Qian Chen, Zhang-Xin Dong, Yin-Tao Feng, Yue Li, Gang School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Engineering High-pressure methane adsorption Marine-continental transitional shale gas Methane adsorption is a critical assessment of the gas storage capacity (GSC) of shales with geological conditions. Although the related research of marine shales has been well-illustrated, the methane adsorption of marine-continental transitional (MCT) shales is still ambiguous. In this study, a method of combining experimental data with analytical models was used to investigate the methane adsorption characteristics and GSC of MCT shales collected from the Qinshui Basin, China. The Ono-Kondo model was used to fit the adsorption data to obtain the adsorption parameters. Subsequently, the geological model of GSC based on pore evolution was constructed using a representative shale sample with a total organic carbon (TOC) content of 1.71%, and the effects of reservoir pressure coefficient and water saturation on GSC were explored. In experimental results, compared to the composition of the MCT shale, the pore structure dominates the methane adsorption, and meanwhile, the maturity mainly governs the pore structure. Besides, maturity in the middle-eastern region of the Qinshui Basin shows a strong positive correlation with burial depth. The two parameters, micropore pore volume and non-micropore surface area, induce a good fit for the adsorption capacity data of the shale. In simulation results, the depth, pressure coefficient, and water saturation of the shale all affect the GSC. It demonstrates a promising shale gas potential of the MCT shale in a deeper block, especially with low water saturation. Specifically, the economic feasibility of shale gas could be a major consideration for the shale with a depth of <800 m and/or water saturation >60% in the Yushe-Wuxiang area. This study provides a valuable reference for the reservoir evaluation and favorable block search of MCT shale gas. Published version This work was jointly supported by the Science and Technology Department of Shanxi Province, China (20201101003), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (U1810201) and the China Scholarship Council (202206400012). 2024-12-10T05:04:29Z 2024-12-10T05:04:29Z 2024 Journal Article Lu, C., Xiao, X., Xue, Z., Chen, Z., Dong, Y., Feng, Y. & Li, G. (2024). Investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution. Petroleum Science, 21(4), 2273-2286. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.petsci.2024.03.027 1672-5107 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181590 10.1016/j.petsci.2024.03.027 2-s2.0-85199075875 4 21 2273 2286 en Petroleum Science © 2024 The Authors. Publishing services by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi Communications Co. Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/ 4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering
High-pressure methane adsorption
Marine-continental transitional shale gas
spellingShingle Engineering
High-pressure methane adsorption
Marine-continental transitional shale gas
Lu, Chen-Gang
Xiao, Xian-Ming
Xue, Zhen-Qian
Chen, Zhang-Xin
Dong, Yin-Tao
Feng, Yue
Li, Gang
Investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution
description Methane adsorption is a critical assessment of the gas storage capacity (GSC) of shales with geological conditions. Although the related research of marine shales has been well-illustrated, the methane adsorption of marine-continental transitional (MCT) shales is still ambiguous. In this study, a method of combining experimental data with analytical models was used to investigate the methane adsorption characteristics and GSC of MCT shales collected from the Qinshui Basin, China. The Ono-Kondo model was used to fit the adsorption data to obtain the adsorption parameters. Subsequently, the geological model of GSC based on pore evolution was constructed using a representative shale sample with a total organic carbon (TOC) content of 1.71%, and the effects of reservoir pressure coefficient and water saturation on GSC were explored. In experimental results, compared to the composition of the MCT shale, the pore structure dominates the methane adsorption, and meanwhile, the maturity mainly governs the pore structure. Besides, maturity in the middle-eastern region of the Qinshui Basin shows a strong positive correlation with burial depth. The two parameters, micropore pore volume and non-micropore surface area, induce a good fit for the adsorption capacity data of the shale. In simulation results, the depth, pressure coefficient, and water saturation of the shale all affect the GSC. It demonstrates a promising shale gas potential of the MCT shale in a deeper block, especially with low water saturation. Specifically, the economic feasibility of shale gas could be a major consideration for the shale with a depth of <800 m and/or water saturation >60% in the Yushe-Wuxiang area. This study provides a valuable reference for the reservoir evaluation and favorable block search of MCT shale gas.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Lu, Chen-Gang
Xiao, Xian-Ming
Xue, Zhen-Qian
Chen, Zhang-Xin
Dong, Yin-Tao
Feng, Yue
Li, Gang
format Article
author Lu, Chen-Gang
Xiao, Xian-Ming
Xue, Zhen-Qian
Chen, Zhang-Xin
Dong, Yin-Tao
Feng, Yue
Li, Gang
author_sort Lu, Chen-Gang
title Investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution
title_short Investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution
title_full Investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution
title_fullStr Investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution
title_full_unstemmed Investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution
title_sort investigations of methane adsorption characteristics on marine-continental transitional shales and gas storage capacity models considering pore evolution
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181590
_version_ 1819113010116952064