4.5 Article

Methane adsorption capacity of marine-continental transitional facies shales: The case study of the Upper Permian Longtan Formation, northern Guizhou Province, Southwest China

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.petrol.2019.106406

Keywords

Methane adsorption capacity; Marine-continental transitional facies shale; Moisture content; Longtan Formation

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFE0106300]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41802167]

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Factors influencing the methane adsorption capacity (MAC) of marine-continental transitional facies shales have been identified applying a variety of techniques (e.g., total organic carbon (TOC) content, X-ray diffraction mineralogy, low-pressure CO2 and N-2 adsorption, and methane adsorption analyses) on samples from the Upper Permian Longtan Formation, northern Guizhou Province, Southwest China. The TOC contents of the Longtan shale samples ranged between 1.2 and 9.9 wt% (average = 3.5 wt%). The results of the bulk XRD analysis suggested that the mineralogical composition of the studied samples was different from that of typical marine shales: the samples primarily consisted of clay minerals, followed by quartz and feldspar. The Langmuir volumes (V-L) of the 14 shale samples ranged from 1.02 ml/g to 5.25 ml/g (average = 2.52 ml/g); moreover, their MAC was positively correlated with the pore volume, surface area, and TOC content, suggesting that organic matter and pore structure were the most critical factors influencing the adsorption capacity of these transitional shales. Our results showed that the MAC was not positively with the clay content; additionally, the MAC tended to increase with increasing pressure, but to decrease with increasing temperature. The presence of moisture greatly reduced the MAC. Overall, the MAC of the transitional Longtan Formation shales resulted to be quite different from that of typical marine shales (e.g., the Lower Silurian Longmaxi Formation in the Sichuan Basin) in terms of mineralogical component and abundance of organic pores. The particularly high abundance of (hydrophilic) clay minerals in the Longtan Formation transitional shales resulted in a higher number of adsorption sites occupied by water molecules than in the Longmaxi Formation and a lower MAC. Finally, the abundance of organic pores in marine shales resulted in a higher MAC than that of transitional shales.

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