Abstract

Research on gas accumulation mechanisms and variations in gas saturation is limited in the newly established Mugua gas field in the Ordos Basin. Understanding these aspects is vital for reduce drilling uncertainty and exploration risk. This study employed a variety of methods, including: (1) the use of organic geochemical examinations to determine the gas expulsion intensity of hydrocarbon source rocks; (2) fluid inclusion analyses to determine the time of gas accumulation; (3) a combination of optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy observations, pore-simulation and permeability tests, mercury-intrusion capillary pressure experiments, and nuclear magnetic resonance studies to assess the properties of the reservoir quality and identify the tight sandstone rock type; (4) wireline logging and interpretive data analyses to research the gas saturations features; and (5) establish reservoir quality evolution model to systematically study this problem. Integrating fluid inclusion homogenization temperatures with burial and thermal histories indicates that gas accumulation in the Mugua gas fields occurred throughout the Early Jurassic to Late Cretaceous period. Five diagenetic facies have been identified: dissolution, quartz-cemented, clay mineral filling, tightly compacted, and carbonate-cemented facies. The reservoir quality evolution model reveals that the five diagenetic facies experienced densification before the period of gas accumulation. Therefore, for gas accumulation in tight sandstones, it is essential that mature and gas-generating source rocks, provide sufficient expulsion forces to drive gas into the rocks. The mechanism of gas accumulation in the Mugua gas field's tight gas sandstone reservoirs involves the process occurring in sandstones that are either near or interbedded with source rocks, under high pore-fluid pressure generated by gas production. Compared to other Upper Paleozoic gas fields in the Ordos Basin, the gas expulsion intensity in the Mugua gas field is lower, ranging from 6.12–8.39 × 108 m3/km2. Due to the low gas expulsion intensity, the Shihezi 8 Member's tight sandstone reservoirs, situated away from the source rock, typically show low gas saturation. Conversely, the dissolution and quartz-cemented facies within the Benxi, Taiyuan, and Shanxi Formations, intimately interbedded with hydrocarbon source rocks, exhibit good reservoir quality. They offer ideal conditions for gas accumulation, making them prime candidates for exploration and development.

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