4.7 Article

A study on molecular structural evolution of type II kerogen in a gold tube thermal system: Insights from solid-state 13C NMR

Journal

FUEL
Volume 331, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2022.125898

Keywords

Type II kerogen; Gold tube pyrolysis; 13C NMR; Molecular structure; Aromatic component

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This study simulated the maturation process of lacustrine type II kerogen and investigated the molecular structure evolution. It was found that the aliphatic fractions decreased and aromatic fractions increased with increasing maturity. Before the main oil window, nonhydrocarbon heteroatomic functional groups were the main products. The oil peak occurred when hydrocarbon C14+ production reached its maximum. After the oil peak, aromatic groups became dominant. In the gas window, the large quantity of C1-5 was mainly due to the secondary cracking of hydrocarbons. The number of aromatic structures caused by alkyl bond breaking and condensation was estimated.
Lacustrine type II kerogen is widely distributed in China and has important hydrocarbon potential, but the study of its structural evolution is not comprehensive enough. In this study, a closed gold tube system was used to simulate the maturation of kerogen extracted from the Nengjiang Formation of the Songliao Basin to investigate a model of hydrocarbon generation and molecular structure change in lacustrine type II kerogen. The pyrolysis products at two heating rates were collected and quantitatively analyzed, and the Easy%Ro of 20 solid kerogen residue samples (solid pyrolysis products after extraction of methylene chloride and methanol) ranged from 0.69 to 2.49. From elemental analysis and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (13C NMR), the molecular structure evo-lution of kerogen was clearly determined, and four average molecular models of kerogen were established. The results show that with increasing maturity, the aliphatic fractions of kerogen decreased, and the aromatic fractions increased. Before the main oil window (Easy%Ro < 0.89), the main products were nonhydrocarbon heteroatomic functional groups (NSOs: asphaltene and resin). The oil peak occurred at an Easy%Ro of approx-imately 1.1 when hydrocarbon C14+ production reached the maximum and kerogen residue was the lowest. After the oil peak, aromatic groups became dominant in the structure. C14+ began to decrease, and the kerogen residue proportion increased, which was related to the occurrence of secondary coking reactions after the main oil window. The hydrocarbon generation capacity of kerogen was exhausted after the oil peak, and the kerogen likely became the precursor of generated gaseous products. In the gas window (Easy%Ro > 1.53), the large quantity of C1-5 was mainly due to the secondary cracking of hydrocarbons. The number of aromatic structures caused by alkyl bond breaking and condensation was estimated. It was found that before the oil peak, the number of aromatic structures caused by alkyl bond breaking decreased and was higher than that of aromatic structures caused by condensation. After the oil peak, the latter structures were obviously dominant, which further in-dicates that polymerization is the main structural change mechanism of kerogen evolution.

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