4.8 Review

Chemical and Reactive Transport Processes Associated with Hydraulic Fracturing of Unconventional Oil/Gas Shales

期刊

CHEMICAL REVIEWS
卷 122, 期 9, 页码 9198-9263

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.1c00504

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资金

  1. Center for Mechanistic Control of Unconventional Formations (CMC-UF), an Energy Frontier Research Center - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, under DOE (BES) [DE-SC0019165]
  2. EFRC-MUSE, an Energy Frontier Research Center - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0019285]

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This review focuses on the complex chemical interactions between additives in hydraulic fracturing fluid (HFF) and minerals and organic matter in oil/gas shales. These interactions affect hydrocarbon recovery by influencing mineral dissolution and precipitation processes, as well as the porosity and permeability of the shales. The review also discusses the distribution of unconventional oil/gas shales, the types and purposes of chemical additives in HFF, and analysis methods used in characterizing the shales before and after hydraulic fracturing.
Hydraulic fracturing of unconventional oil/gas shales has changed the energy landscape of the U.S. Recovery of hydrocarbons from tight, hydraulically fractured shales is a highly inefficient process, with estimated recoveries of <25% for natural gas and <5% for oil. This review focuses on the complex chemical interactions of additives in hydraulic fracturing fluid (HFF) with minerals and organic matter in oil/gas shales. These interactions are intended to increase hydrocarbon recovery by increasing porosities and permeabilities of tight shales. However, fluid-shale interactions result in the dissolution of shale minerals and the release and transport of chemical components. They also result in mineral precipitation in the shale matrix, which can reduce permeability, porosity, and hydrocarbon recovery. Competition between mineral dissolution and mineral precipitation processes influences the amounts of oil and gas recovered. We review the temporal/spatial origins and distribution of unconventional oil/gas shales from mudstones and shales, followed by discussion of their global and U.S. distributions and compositional differences from different U.S. sedimentary basins. We discuss the major types of chemical additives in HFF with their intended purposes, including drilling muds. Fracture distribution, porosity, permeability, and the identity and molecular-level speciation of minerals and organic matter in oil/gas shales throughout the hydraulic fracturing process are discussed. Also discussed are analysis methods used in characterizing oil/gas shales before and after hydraulic fracturing, including permeametry and porosimetry measurements, X-ray diffraction/Rietveld refinement, X-ray computed tomography, scanning/transmission electron microscopy, and laboratory- and synchrotron-based imaging/spectroscopic methods. Reactive transport and spatial scaling are discussed in some detail in order to relate fundamental molecular-scale processes to fluid transport. Our review concludes with a discussion of potential environmental impacts of hydraulic fracturing and important knowledge gaps that must be bridged to achieve improved mechanistic understanding of fluid transport in oil/gas shales.

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