4.5 Article

Geochemistry and sources of hydrate-bound gas in the Shenhu area, northern south China sea: Insights from drilling and gas hydrate production tests

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.petrol.2021.109459

Keywords

Gas hydrates; Pressure core; Production test; Hydrate-bound gas; Source rocks; Migration; Shenhu area; Northern South China Sea

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41806074, 41730528, 51991365]
  2. Marine Geological Survey Program of China Geological Survey [DD20190217, DD20190218]
  3. Key Special Project for Introduced Talents Team of Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Guangzhou) [GML2019ZD0307]
  4. Major Program of Guangdong Basic and Applied Research [2019B030302004]
  5. Guangzhou Science and Technology [201909010002]

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The study explores the relationship between the origin and source of hydrate-bound gas and deep conventional oil and gas accumulation in a basin in order to understand the gas hydrates accumulation mechanism and evaluate resource potential. Results indicate that the thermogenic hydrate gas primarily originates from deep sedimentary rocks and contains both biogenic and thermogenic gases. This finding confirms the source rocks of the thermogenic hydrate gas in the Shenhu area and demonstrates the coupling relationship between shallow gas hydrate accumulations and deep conventional reservoirs.
Research on the origin and source of hydrate-bound gas and its relationship to deep conventional oil and gas accumulation in a basin is critical to understanding the accumulation mechanism of gas hydrates and to resource evaluation of gas hydrate accumulation. In this study, the hydrate-bound gas obtained via pressure coring and the production gas recovered during a production test on a gas hydrate reservoir in the Shenhu area offshore of Southern China were tested and discussed. The geochemical analysis results indicate that methane is the predominant gas, and heavier hydrocarbons (C2+) are also present but in low concentrations. The molecular compositions of the hydrate gas recovered from two production test sites are similar to those of the hydrate-bound gas acquired via pressure coring. In addition to the isotopic composition of the methane, the carbon and hydrogen isotopes of the C2+ hydrocarbons were obtained for the first time. The delta C-13 isotopes of the methane range from -66.6 parts per thousand to -46.2 parts per thousand, indicating that the hydrate-bound gases have a mixed origin, containing both biogenic and thermogenic gases. The plot of delta C-13(1) versus delta C-13(2) suggests that the biogenic and thermogenic hydrocarbons were derived from marine organic matter and terrestrial organic matter, respectively. The isotopic characterization of the hydrate-bound gas reveals that the thermogenic hydrate gas contains both humic-type gas and sapropel-type gas, but the sapropel-type gas is predominant. The source rocks of the thermogenic hydrate gas are interpreted to be both the gas-prone coal measure strata of the Enping Formation and the oil-prone medium-deep lacustrine strata of the Wenchang Formation, the latter of which contributed more to the hydrocarbon supply of the gas hydrates. In addition, the maturity of the source rocks of the thermogenic hydrate gas may be lower than that of the deeply buried conventional hydrocarbons discovered in the Baiyun Sag-Panyu Low Uplift area. The seismic profile crossing the shallow gas hydrate accumulations and deep conventional gas reservoirs clearly shows that the proven LW3-1 thermogenic gas reservoir communicated with the gas hydrate stability zone through vertical migration pathways formed by high-angle faults and gas chimneys. This indicates that there was a cogenetic relationship between the thermogenic hydrate gas and the deep conventional hydrocarbon reservoir, which was supplied the thermogenic gas derived from both the Wenchang and Enping formations. The major implications of this finding are that it confirms, rather than theorizes, the identity of the hydrocarbon source rocks of the thermogenic hydrate gas in the Shenhu area for the first time, and it demonstrates the coupling relationship between the shallow gas hydrate accumulations and the deep conventional reservoirs proposed in previous studies. The mechanisms of hydrocarbon migration and gas hydrate accumulation in the production test gas hydrate reservoirs in the Shenhu area were also identified, providing a valuable reference for subsequent exploration and for the potential exploitation of gas hydrate reservoirs in the South China Sea.

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