Abstract

Marine shales exhibit unusual behavior at low temperatures under anoxic gas flow. They generate catalytic gas 300° below thermal cracking temperatures, discontinuously in aperiodic episodes, and lose these properties on exposure to trace amounts of oxygen. Here we report a surprising reversal in hydrocarbon generation. Heavy hydrocarbons are formed before light hydrocarbons resulting in wet gas at the onset of generation grading to dryer gas over time. The effect is moderate under gas flow and substantial in closed reactions. In sequential closed reactions at 100°C, gas from a Cretaceous Mowry shale progresses from predominately heavy hydrocarbons (66% C5, 2% C1) to predominantly light hydrocarbons (56% C1, 8% C5), the opposite of that expected from desorption of preexisting hydrocarbons. Differences in catalyst substrate composition explain these dynamics. Gas flow should carry heavier hydrocarbons to catalytic sites, in contrast to static conditions where catalytic sites are limited to in-place hydrocarbons. In-place hydrocarbons and their products should become lighter with conversion thus generating lighter hydrocarbon over time, consistent with our experimental results.We recognize the similarities between low-temperature gas generation reported here and the natural progression of wet gas to dry gas over geologic time. There is now substantial evidence for natural catalytic activity in source rocks. Natural gas at thermodynamic equilibrium and the results reported here add to that evidence. Natural catalysis provides a plausible and unique explanation for the origin and evolution of gas in sedimentary basins.

Highlights

  • Marine shales release gas under isotherm gas flow at lowtemperatures [1]

  • Natural gas at thermodynamic equilibrium and the results reported here add to that evidence

  • Recent hydrous pyrolysis experiments would seem to rule out natural catalytic activity in general [15], and activity by transition metals [16] in particular

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Summary

Introduction

In distinct aperiodic episodes that continue over time. It is nonlinear kinetic behavior resembling chaotic catalysis by transition metals [2]. The recent disclosure of natural gas at thermodynamic equilibrium and catalytic gas from marine shales constrained, strongly suggests natural catalysis as the source of natural gas [3]. Recent hydrous pyrolysis experiments would seem to rule out natural catalytic activity in general [15], and activity by transition metals [16] in particular. This (page number not for citation purposes)

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