4.7 Article

Absolute adsorption of light hydrocarbons on organic-rich shale: An efficient determination method

Journal

FUEL
Volume 308, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2021.121998

Keywords

Adsorbed-layer density; Simplified local density theory; Absolute adsorption; Excess adsorption; Molecular simulation

Funding

  1. Open Fund of State Key Laboratory of Oil and Gas Reservoir Geology and Exploitation (Chengdu University of Technology) [PLC2020050]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [52004221]
  3. PetroChina Innovation Foundation [2019D-5007-0204]
  4. Shaanxi Provincial Education Department [21JY034]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52004320]
  6. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [ZX20190438]

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Absolute adsorption is found to be more accurate than excess adsorption for estimating shale gas storage, and a new method using simplified local density theory is proposed for efficiently obtaining the adsorbed-layer density, crucial for accurately determining gas and oil storage in shale reservoirs.
Absolute adsorption has been found being more accurate than directly measured excess adsorption value for estimating the in-situ shale gas-in-place storage. To obtain accurate absolute adsorption, traditional methods determined the adsorbed gas density using complicated molecular simulation methods, which is employed to correct the measured excess value. In this work, excess adsorption, which is deemed to be inaccurate in previous work, of CH4 and C3H8 is first measured on three typical shale rocks. The adsorbed-layer density is then reasonably calculated using the simplified local density theory (SLD) to obtain corresponding absolute adsorption of CH4 and C3H8. It is found that the adsorbed layer density calculated from SLD theory is comparable to that obtained from molecular simulation methods, while it is more efficient for the density computation. Compared to CH4, C3H8 presents stronger adsorption capacity on shale rocks, suggesting that C3H8 is more affinity to organic shale. The CH4 ' s absolute adsorption is stronger than its excess value and their deviation enlarges as pressure increases, while absolute adsorption for C3H8 is found to be more or less the same with the measured excess value. The importance of this work lies in that we propose a new method for efficiently obtaining the adsorbed-layer density, which is crucial for accurately determining gas and oil storage in shale reservoirs.

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