Abstract

Shale gas deposits are self-sourced, self-accumulating, and self-preserving in the Upper Ordovician Wufeng Formation and Lower Silurian Longmaxi Formation of the Fuling Shale Gas Field in the eastern Sichuan Basin. They were both seemingly mixed by secondary oil cracking and kerogen cracking gases during the high maturation window. The reservoir space primarily consists of mineral pores and organic matter (OM) pores, and the shale gas was mainly trapped by a high-pressure system. In this study, the Fuling O3w-S1l Shale Gas Field in the eastern Sichuan Basin was used as a case study to discuss the coevolutionary process and organic-inorganic interactions of hydrocarbon generation, accumulation, and preservation. The results indicate that the processes and mechanisms of organic-inorganic interactions and coevolution of hydrocarbon generation and reservoir preservation are quite different among the shale graptolite zones (GZ) with respect to hydrocarbon generation, types and characteristics of shale gas reservoirs, seal characteristics, and their spatiotemporal relations. In the WF2-LM4 GZ, the favorable OM, biogenic authigenic quartz and organic-inorganic interactions are highly coupled, leading to the high level of coevolution demonstrated within the field, as well as to the favorable conditions for shale gas accumulation. Conversely, the overlying LM5-LM8 GZ seemingly exhibits early densification and late charge and has a reverse mode of reservoir development (i.e., low degree of coevolution). These two coevolutionary processes were conducive to the development of a high degree of spatiotemporal matching between the reservoir (i.e., WF2-LM4 GZ) and the seal (i.e., LM5-LM8 GZ). This is due to underlying differences in their coevolutionary histories. The synthetic work presented here on the coevolutionary processes and mechanisms of formation for organic-inorganic interactions and hydrocarbon generation and reservoir preservation reveals insights into the driving mechanisms of shale gas enrichment, providing a basis for effectively predicting favorable enrichment intervals for shale gas worldwide.

Highlights

  • During the past 10 years, most of the research on shale gas reservoirs has focused on source rock [1,2,3], reservoir types, porosity, and pore structure [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]

  • It should be noted that the research of coevolutionary dynamics of organic-inorganic interactions, hydrocarbon generation, and shale gas reservoir preservation of the Upper Ordovician Wufeng and Lower Silurian Longmaxi Formations between the WF2-LM4 GZ and the LM5-LM8 GZ is a theoretical study of the static characteristics, coevolution process, evolution mode, and evolution characteristics of two graptolite zones

  • The Fuling O3w-S1l Shale Gas Field in the eastern Sichuan Basin was used as a case study to discuss the coevolutionary processes and organic-inorganic interactions of hydrocarbon generation and reservoir preservation

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Summary

Introduction

During the past 10 years, most of the research on shale gas reservoirs has focused on source rock [1,2,3], reservoir types, porosity, and pore structure [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. The driving processes behind diagenetic pathways in shales [10, 30, 31], the nature of pores in shales, and the controls on porosity evolution remain poorly known [17] This does not take into consideration the effects of hydrocarbon generation and expulsion processes on mineral diagenesis, mineral pore evolution, and the relationship between organic (hydrocarbon generation) and inorganic (reservoir evolution) coevolutionary processes. This study systematically analyzed the coevolutionary process and mechanisms of hydrocarbon generation and reservoir preservation based on organic geochemistry, mineralogy, pore characterization, seal characteristics, and the corresponding evolutionary history, combined with shale gas exploration and development in the largest Lower Paleozoic shale gas field in the world at Fuling, in the eastern Sichuan Basin. This may provide the basis for effective predicting favorable enrichment intervals of the Upper Ordovician Wufeng Formation and Lower Silurian Longmaxi Formation shale gas worldwide

Geological Setting
Samples and Methods
Source Rock
Reservoir Rock
Direct Seal
Analysis of Wufeng and Longmaxi Shale Gas Potential
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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