4.3 Article

Organic matter properties and shale gas potential of Paleozoic shales in Sichuan Basin, China

Journal

JOURNAL OF NATURAL GAS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Volume 28, Issue -, Pages 434-446

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jngse.2015.12.003

Keywords

Sichuan basin; Shale gas; Marine shale; Organic matter; Overmature source rocks; Biomarkers

Funding

  1. National Programs for Fundamental Research and Development of China (973 Program) [2012CB214701]
  2. CAS Action-Plan for West Development [KZCX2-XB3-12]
  3. Key Laboratory Project of Gansu Province [1309RTSA041]

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In this study, Lower Paleozoic shale samples collected from Lower Cambrian Niutitang Formation, Upper Ordovician Wufeng Formation, and Lower Silurian Longmaxi Formation in different regions in the Sichuan Basin were analyzed using geochemical and petrophysical methods to characterize the difference in organic matter properties (including abundance, type and thermal maturity), pore development, mineralogy to shale gas resources potential. The studied marine shales all displayed excellent, high quality organic matter richness and could be the strata for shale gas generation over geological time. There are four systematic geochemical and petrophysical variation trends that indicate that the over mature source rocks of the Sichuan Basin constitute a special shale gas reservoir system: (1) The measured delta C-13 values for sedimentary organic carbon (TOC) presents a distinct trend indicative of C-13 enrichment, which indicates that the TOC may be related to the diversity of preserved phytoplankton in the different shale strata in the Sichuan Basin. This biont diversity and organism replacement process were confirmed by the biomarker distribution patterns in the sediments. (2) The bitumen A contents display negative correlation with sedimentary age and TOC, suggesting that most of the residual liquid hydrocarbons in those shales have been transformed into shale gas due to higher thermal maturity during the diagenetic transformation of the organic matter burial process, and the shale gas in reservoirs in those types of shales were mostly generated from the cracking of residual bitumen during a stage of relatively high thermal evolution. (3) The quartz and TOC present strongly positive relationship, suggesting that the increased quartz in most of the marine shales is a biogenic silica signal. (4) Total porosity displays a negative relationship with TOC and the quartz contents in the three Paleozoic marine shales, suggesting that re-precipitated pyrobitumen created by oil cracked to gas in overmature source rocks could be the reason leading to the lowest porosity and smaller pores in the most aged but most TOC-abundant shales. Skewing toward smaller pores will reduce the pore volume and result in larger internal surface areas and greater sorption energies, which should reduce the productive capacity of shale gas. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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