Abstract: Secondary porosity in deep prospects: Implications of alkali feldspar dissolution in sandstones

AAPG Bulletin ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 84 (2000) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Wilkinson1, R. Stuart Haszeldi
2019 ◽  
Vol 109 ◽  
pp. 104419
Author(s):  
Jörgen Rosenqvist ◽  
Andrew D. Kilpatrick ◽  
Bruce W.D. Yardley ◽  
Christopher A. Rochelle

2009 ◽  
Vol 258 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 125-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qi Fu ◽  
Peng Lu ◽  
Hiromi Konishi ◽  
Robert Dilmore ◽  
Huifang Xu ◽  
...  

1995 ◽  
Vol 59 (396) ◽  
pp. 505-534 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. David L. Walker ◽  
Martin R. Lee ◽  
Ian Parsons

AbstractScanning Electron Microscopy and Transmission Electron Microscopy show that normal, slightly turbid alkali feldspars from many plutonic rocks contain high concentrations of micropores, from ∼1 µm to a few nm in length, typically 0.1 µm. There may be 109 pores mm−3 and porosities as high as 4.75 vol.% have been observed, although ∼1% is typical. Only ‘pristine’ feldspars, which are dark coloured when seen in the massive rock, such as in larvikite and some rapakivi granites, are almost devoid of pores. Weathering enlarges prexisting pores and exploits sub-regularly spaced edge dislocations which occur in semicoherent microperthites, but the underlying textures which lead to skeletal grains in soils are inherited from the high temperature protolith. Most pores are devoid of solid inclusions, but a variety of solid particles has been found. Although the presence of fluid in pores cannot usually be demonstrated directly, crushing experiments have shown that Ar and halogens reside in fluids. Some pores are ‘negative crystals’, often with re-entrants defined by the {110} Adularia habit, while others have curved surfaces often tapering to thin, cusp-shaped apices. The variable shape of pores accounts for the ability of some pores to retain fluid although the texture is elsewhere micropermeable, as shown by 18O exchange experiments.Apart from rare, primary pores in pristine feldspar, pore development is accompanied by profound recrystallization of the surrounding microtexture, with partial loss of coherency in cryptoperthites. This leads to marked ‘deuteric coarsening’ forming patch and vein perthite, and replacement of ‘tweed’ orthoclase by twinned microcline. The Ab- and Or-rich phases in patch perthite are made up of discrete subgrains and the cuspate pores often develop at triple-junctions between them. Coarsened lamellar and vein perthites are composed of microporous subgrain textures. These ‘unzipping’ reactions result from fluid-feldspar interactions, at T <450°C in hypersolvus syenites and T < 350°C in a subsolvus granites, and are driven by elastic strain-energy in coherent cryptoperthites and in tweed textures. Further textural change may continue to surface temperatures. In salic igneous rocks there is a general connection between turbidity and the type of mafic mineral present; pristine alkali feldspars occur in salic igneous rocks with a preponderance of anhydrous mafic phases.Because alkali feldspar is so abundant (and larger, 10 μm pores have previously been described in plagioclase), intracrystal porosity is a non-trivial feature of a large volume of the middle and upper crust. The importance of pores in the following fields is discussed: 39Ar/40Ar dating and ‘thermochronometry’; oxygen exchange; Rb and Sr diffusion; weathering; experimental low-temperature dissolution; development of secondary porosity and diagenetic albitization; leachable sources of metals; nuclear waste isolation; deformation; seismic anisotropy; electrical conductivity. Important questions concern the temperature range of the development of the textures and their stability during burial and transport into the deeper crust.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 234-249
Author(s):  
Sibing Liu ◽  
Anqing Chen ◽  
Zhongmin Shen ◽  
Zhengxiang Lv ◽  
Xiaoxing Zhang

Abstract Secondary porosity in the Upper Triassic Xujiahe tight sandstone of the western Sichuan Basin is mainly the product of feldspar dissolution. In the Xu-4 Member, the upper reservoir of the Xujiahe Formation, feldspars are dissolved to a significant extent and observations indicate that nearly all feldspars have been dissolved completely, with only 1.73% content of feldspar remaining. In the Xu-2 Member, the lower reservoir, feldspars are well preserved; the current content of feldspar is 12.54% on average, and the secondary porosity derived from feldspar dissolution is less than 1%. Kaolinite occurs almost exclusively in the Xu-4, but it is nearly absent in the Xu-2. The K+ content in the Xu-2 is 3.3 times higher than that in Xu-4. The K+/H+ ratio in the Xu-2 is also higher than that in the Xu-4. These differences between the two reservoirs can be attributed to their distinguishing fluid-rock systems. The low K+ content and relatively high δ18O in the Xu-4 formation water are the result of intensive fluid-rock interaction in an open fluid-rock system. The upper Xu-4 is close to the overlying coal-measures of the Xu-5 from which organic acid flowed into the Xu-4. Meanwhile, K+ contained in sandstone migrated out to the mudstones. The resulting low K+/H+ ratio in the formation water of the Xu-4 was responsible for almost all the feldspar dissolution and kaolinite formation. In contrast, due to the relatively closed fluid-rock system in the Xu-2, K+ did not migrate into adjacent rocks and acidic fluids did not invade, which led to K+-rich formation waters maintaining a high K+/H+ ratio. Hence, K-feldspar was well preserved and kaolinite was completely transformed into illite. Therefore, in contrast to the Xu-2 tight sandstone, the Xu-4 sandstone has relatively higher secondary porosity, which favours the formation of better quality reservoirs.


1998 ◽  
Vol 151 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 235-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric H. Oelkers ◽  
Jacques Schott

Clay Minerals ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 497-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Lønøy ◽  
J. Akselsen ◽  
K. Rønning

AbstractCalcite cementation and extensive dissolution of feldspar with formation of authigenic kaolinite, quartz cement and secondary porosity are the main diagenetic processes in the deeply buried Hild Field. Mineralogical and isotopic analyses, reservoir pressure and depositional environment suggest that these diagenetic processes occurred prior to burial at a depth of 1·5–2 km. The timing of the diagenetic sequence suggests that feldspar dissolution is related to meteoric water flow. Calcite occurs as an early diagenetic iron-poor cement, and as two types of later diagenetic (<120°C) ferroan calcite cements. The ferroan calcites are mainly an in situ dissolution-reprecipitation product of the early diagenetic phase. Extensive local dissolution of calcite was important for forming secondary porosity which is closely associated with a prominent ‘gas chimney’ in the area studied. A high CO2 content in the natural gases of the reservoir suggests that the solvent was carbonic acid formed from CO2 generated during thermal maturation of organic matter. Calcite dissolution probably occurred between 70° and 100°C.


Author(s):  
Isabel Lange ◽  
Marcos Toro ◽  
Rolf S. Arvidson ◽  
Inna Kurganskaya ◽  
Andreas Luttge

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