Porosity and pore size distribution of deeply-buried fine-grained rocks: Influence of diagenetic and metamorphic processes on shale reservoir quality and exploration

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 134-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gareth R.L. Chalmers ◽  
R. Marc Bustin
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. T1001-T1022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fnu Suriamin ◽  
Matthew J. Pranter

We have determined how stratigraphy and lithofacies control pore structures in the Mississippian limestone and chert reservoir of north-central Oklahoma. There are 17 lithofacies and 29 high-frequency cycles documented in the Mississippian interval of this study. The high-frequency cycles have thicknesses ranging from 0.3 to 30.5 m (1–100 ft) and are mainly asymmetric regressive phases. The pore characteristics, measured through digital-image analysis (DIA) of thin-sections photomicrographs ([Formula: see text]100), exhibit unique correlations with core porosity, permeability, and lithofacies within a sequence-stratigraphic framework. There are five fundamental correlations observed. First, porosity from DIA and laboratory core measurements has a strong positive relationship ([Formula: see text]). However, some values from DIA porosity yield relatively higher values, specifically in spiculitic mudstone wackestones and argillaceous spiculitic mudstone wackestones. The difference is hypothesized due to the presence of isolated nanopores that are not accessible by helium during measurement of core porosity. Second, the relationship between pore circularity and permeability is indeterminate. The indeterminate relationship is related to a complex internal pore network, intensive diagenetic alteration, an unconnected microfracture network, and isolated pores. Third, positive moderate to strong correlations ([Formula: see text]) between porosity and permeability are observed only in four lithofacies. Fourth, coarse-grained lithofacies within the uppermost depositional sequence of the Mississippian interval have a heterogeneous pore-size distribution, whereas fine-grained lithofacies tend to exhibit a homogeneous pore-size distribution. Fifth, higher reservoir quality is associated with the upper intervals of high-frequency shallowing-upward cycles. This confirms that the sequence-stratigraphic variability of lithofacies is important to predict reservoir quality and its distribution. An alternative graphical method of pore-size distribution is also developed. To be a useful “technique,” examples of the plot are demonstrated using samples in this study. The plot successfully provides simple identification of pore-size classes, quantitative percentage of pore-size class, dominant pore class, and approximate minimum and maximum pore size.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (18) ◽  
pp. 5627
Author(s):  
Maria De La Fuente ◽  
Jean Vaunat ◽  
Héctor Marín-Moreno

Experimental and field observations evidence the effects of capillarity in narrow pores on inhibiting the thermodynamic stability of gas hydrates and controlling their saturation. Thus, precise estimates of the gas hydrate global inventory require models that accurately describe gas hydrate stability in sediments. Here, an equilibrium model for hydrate formation in sediments that accounts for capillary inhibition effects is developed and validated against experimental data. Analogous to water freezing in pores, the model assumes that hydrate formation is controlled by the sediment pore size distribution and the balance of capillary forces at the hydrate–liquid interface. To build the formulation, we first derive the Clausius–Clapeyron equation for the thermodynamic equilibrium of methane and water chemical potentials. Then, this equation is combined with the van Genuchten’s capillary pressure to relate the thermodynamic properties of the system to the sediment pore size distribution and hydrate saturation. The model examines the influence of the sediment pore size distribution on hydrate saturation through the simulation of hydrate formation in sand, silt, and clays, under equilibrium conditions and without mass transfer limitations. The results show that at pressure–temperature conditions typically found in the seabed, capillary effects in very fine-grained clays can limit the maximum hydrate saturation below 20% of the host sediment porosity.


2001 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 741-754 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul H Simms ◽  
Ernest K Yanful

The soil-water characteristic curve (SWCC) of fine-grained soils is usually determined experimentally. In many applications, such as design of mine waste covers and landfill liners, the unsaturated permeability function, k(h), is often derived theoretically from the measured SWCC. Implicit in these derivations is the transformation of the SWCC to a pore-size distribution (PSD), typically assumed to be constant and mono-modal. PSDs of a clayey till compacted at various water contents were measured after compaction, after flexible-wall permeability testing, and during and after SWCC tests. The measurements show that the PSD changes significantly during permeability and SWCC testing. A method is advanced for predicting the observed changes in PSD during SWCC testing. PSDs are determined for soil samples subjected to the highest and lowest suctions applied during the SWCC test. The measured PSDs are transformed to account for pore trapping; the transform assumes that flow occurs through two sets of randomly distributed pores in series. To model pore shrinkage, the pores are idealized as elastic cylinders. PSDs measured after different suction applications in the SWCC tests are compared with predictions of the shrinkage model. The method can also be used to predict the SWCC. Measured and predicted values are compared.Key words: landfill liners, mine waste covers, soil-water characteristic curve, pore-size distribution.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Iacomi ◽  
Philip L. Llewellyn

Material characterisation through adsorption is a widely-used laboratory technique. The isotherms obtained through volumetric or gravimetric experiments impart insight through their features but can also be analysed to determine material characteristics such as specific surface area, pore size distribution, surface energetics, or used for predicting mixture adsorption. The pyGAPS (python General Adsorption Processing Suite) framework was developed to address the need for high-throughput processing of such adsorption data, independent of the origin, while also being capable of presenting individual results in a user-friendly manner. It contains many common characterisation methods such as: BET and Langmuir surface area, t and α plots, pore size distribution calculations (BJH, Dollimore-Heal, Horvath-Kawazoe, DFT/NLDFT kernel fitting), isosteric heat calculations, IAST calculations, isotherm modelling and more, as well as the ability to import and store data from Excel, CSV, JSON and sqlite databases. In this work, a description of the capabilities of pyGAPS is presented. The code is then be used in two case studies: a routine characterisation of a UiO-66(Zr) sample and in the processing of an adsorption dataset of a commercial carbon (Takeda 5A) for applications in gas separation.


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