Integration of Multiscale Imaging of Nanoscale Pore Microstructures in Gas Shales

Author(s):  
Mohamed Garum ◽  
Paul W. J. Glover ◽  
Piroska Lorinczi ◽  
Stuart Micklethwaite ◽  
Ali Hassanpour
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Garum ◽  
Paul Glover ◽  
Piroska Lorinczi ◽  
Ali Hassanpour

<p> </p><p>Cost-effective and environmentally sensitive shale gas production requires detailed knowledge of the petrophysical characteristics of the shale from which the gas is extracted. Parameters such as the kerogen fraction, pore size distributions, porosity, permeability, the frackability of the rock and the degree to which natural fracturing already occurs are required in order to be able to estimate potential gas reserves and how easily it can be extracted. Innovative imaging techniques, including Focused Ion Beam Scanning Electron Microscopy (FIB-SEM) and Nanoscale X-Ray Tomography (nano-CT), can be used to characterise the microstructural properties of shale. Here we report using FIB-SEM serial sectioning and nano-CT on approximately cubic samples of side length about 25 µm. The resolution of the FIB-SEM scanning is approximately 20 nm, while that of the nano-CT is about 50 nm, providing between 125 and 1953 million voxels per scan. These ultra-high resolution techniques have been shown to be effective methods for the analysis and imaging of shale microstructure. Each technique can provide data over a different and separate range of scales, and with different resolutions. Results analysed so far indicate that pores which seem to be unconnected when imaged on a micrometre scale by micro-CT scanning, are connected by thin pathways when imaged at these higher resolutions. This nano-scale connectivity is responsible for the small but non-zero permeability of gas shales to gas flow, which is typically measured in the range 5 nD – 200 nD. The volume, size, aspect ratios, surface area to volume ratio and orientations have all been calculated from the scanned data as a function of scale. These data indicate an extremely complex, heterogeneous, anisotropic and multimodal pore nanostructure and microstructure for the shales, with structure at all scales contributing to both gas storage and gas flow. Further work analysing the connectivity of the microscale and nanoscale pore spaces within the rock is underway. We believe that the combination of nano-CT with FIB-SEM on the same sample has the potential for providing an enhanced understanding of shale microstructure, which is necessary for modelling elastic behaviour, gas storage, gas desorption and gas flow in gas shales.</p><p><strong>Keywords:</strong> Gas shale, FIB-SEM, nano-CT, porosity, permeability, Kerogen, pore volume, size distribution, pore aspect ratio and surface area to pore volume.</p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 560-570 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence Dobrucki ◽  
Dipanjan Pan ◽  
Andrew Smith

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy K. Plechacek ◽  
◽  
Madeline E. Schreiber ◽  
John A. Chermak ◽  
Tracy L. Bank

Fuel ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 301 ◽  
pp. 121014
Author(s):  
Humera Ansari ◽  
Elena Rietmann ◽  
Lisa Joss ◽  
JP Martin Trusler ◽  
Geoffrey Maitland ◽  
...  

Fractals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (08) ◽  
pp. 1950142
Author(s):  
JINZE XU ◽  
KELIU WU ◽  
RAN LI ◽  
ZANDONG LI ◽  
JING LI ◽  
...  

Effect of nanoscale pore size distribution (PSD) on shale gas production is one of the challenges to be addressed by the industry. An improved approach to study multi-scale real gas transport in fractal shale rocks is proposed to bridge nanoscale PSD and gas filed production. This approach is well validated with field tests. Results indicate the gas production is underestimated without considering a nanoscale PSD. A PSD with a larger fractal dimension in pore size and variance yields a higher fraction of large pores; this leads to a better gas transport capacity; this is owing to a higher free gas transport ratio. A PSD with a smaller fractal dimension yields a lower cumulative gas production; this is because a smaller fractal dimension results in the reduction of gas transport efficiency. With an increase in the fractal dimension in pore size and variance, an apparent permeability-shifting effect is less obvious, and the sensitivity of this effect to a nanoscale PSD is also impaired. Higher fractal dimensions and variances result in higher cumulative gas production and a lower sensitivity of gas production to a nanoscale PSD, which is due to a better gas transport efficiency. The shale apparent permeability-shifting effect to nanoscale is more sensitive to a nanoscale PSD under a higher initial reservoir pressure, which makes gas production more sensitive to a nanoscale PSD. The findings of this study can help to better understand the influence of a nanoscale PSD on gas flow capacity and gas production.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Suarez-Rivera ◽  
Sidney J. Green ◽  
John McLennan ◽  
Mao Bai

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