4.5 Article

Differences in Pore Type and Pore Structure between Silurian Longmaxi Marine Shale and Jurassic Dongyuemiao Lacustrine Shale and Their Influence on Shale-Gas Enrichment

Journal

MINERALS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/min13020190

Keywords

pore types; pore structure; marine shale; lacustrine shale; Sichuan Basin

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This paper systematically compares the pore characteristics of the Longmaxi shale and Dongyuemiao shale in the Sichuan Basin, West China. The results show that the two shales have different pore types and structures, with the Longmaxi shale dominated by organic pores and the Dongyuemiao shale primarily composed of clay-mineral pores. These findings are important for shale gas exploration.
The Silurian Longmaxi (S(1)l) marine shale and Jurassic Dongyuemiao (J(1)d) lacustrine shale in the Sichuan Basin, West China have attracted considerable attention from the oil-and-gas industry in China. Currently, the differences in pore types and pore structures between them are poorly understood, which has limited shale-resource exploration in the Sichuan Basin. This paper systemically compares the pore characteristics of Longmaxi shale and Dongyuemiao shale and investigates their impact on shale-gas enrichment by integrating field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), low-pressure gas (CO2 and N-2) adsorption and mercury-intrusion porosimetry, high-pressure sorption isotherms, gas-saturation measurement, molecular-dynamics simulation, etc. The results show that the S(1)l organic-rich marine shale and the J(1)d lacustrine shale have different pore types and pore structures. The S(1)l shale is dominated by organic pores, mainly micropores and mesopores with ink-bottle-like pore shapes, while the J(1)d shale is primarily composed of clay-mineral pores, mainly mesopores and macropores with slit- or plate-like pore shapes. Organic pores can provide considerable storage space for shale-gas enrichment in S(1)l marine shale, which also determines the adsorption capacity of shale reservoirs. Although organic pores are not the most prevalent in the Dongyuemiao lacustrine shale, they also play an important role in enhancing reservoir quality and absorbed-gas enrichment. Clay-mineral pores contribute weakly to the storage space of J(1)d-lacustrine-shale reservoirs. Mesopores are the most important form of storage space in both S(1)l shale and J(1)d shale, contributing significantly to shale-gas enrichment. Micropores are secondary in importance in S(1)l marine shale, while macropores are secondary contributors to pore volume in J(1)d lacustrine shale.

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