4.6 Article

Catalytic Hydrogenation of Post-Mature Hydrocarbon Source Rocks Under Deep-Derived Fluids: An Example of Early Cambrian Yurtus Formation, Tarim Basin, NW China

Journal

FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2021.626111

Keywords

yurtus formation; simulation experiment; catalytic hydrogenation; gaseous yield; isotope fractionation

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFC0603102]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41625009, 41673066]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA14010404]
  4. National Oil and Gas Major Project [2017ZX05008-002-050]

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Through experiments on post-mature kerogen samples from the Yurtus Formation in the Tarim Basin, it was found that hydrogen and catalysts from deep-derived fluids have significant catalytic hydrogenation effects on organic-rich matter, increasing hydrocarbon generation efficiency and potential in post-mature source rocks.
As a link between the internal and external basin, the deep derived fluids play a key role during the processes of hydrocarbon (HC) formation and accumulation in the form of organic-inorganic interaction. Two questions remain to be answered: How do deep-derived fluids affect HC generation in source rocks by carrying a large amount of matter and energy, especially in post-mature source rocks with weak HC generation capability? Can hydrogen and catalysts from deep sources significantly increase the HC generation potential of the source rock? In this study, we selected the post-mature kerogen samples of the early Cambrian Yurtus Formation in the Tarim Basin of China. Under the catalytic environment of ZnCl2 and MoS2, closed system gold tube thermal simulation experiments were conducted to quantitatively verify the contribution of catalytic hydrogenation to HC promotion by adding H-2. The catalytic hydrogenation increased the kerogen HC generation capacity by 1.4-2.1 times. The catalytic hydrogenation intensity reaction increased with temperature. The drying coefficient of the generated gas decreased significantly as the increasing yield of heavy HC gas. In the simulation experiment, alkane delta C-13 becomes lighter after the catalytic hydrogenation experiment, while delta C-13(CO2) becomes heavier. In the process of catalytic hydrogenation, the number of gaseous products catalyzed by ZnCl2 is higher than that catalyzed by MoS2 under the same conditions, indicating that ZnCl2 is a better catalyst for the generation of gaseous yield. Meanwhile, Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FFT) reaction was happened in the catalytic hydrogenation process. The simulation experiment demonstrates that hydrogen-rich components and metal elements in deep-derived fluids have significant catalytic hydrogenation effects on organic-rich matter, which improved the HC generation efficiency of post-mature source rocks.

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