Abstract

Tectonically deformed coals (TDCs) are of great importance to coalbed methane exploitation and coal mining safety. Compared to primary coals, reservoir properties of TDCs have been transformed greatly by tectonic stress. Here, the pore structure and mechanical properties of primary coal and brittle TDCs were obtained with atomic force microscopy and software. The results showed that tectonic stress generally promotes pore development and Young’s modulus of brittle TDCs. According to the variation in pore structure and Young’s modulus, two stages were identified: weak brittle deformation stage (primary coal–cataclastic coal–schistose coal–mortar coal) and strong brittle deformation stage (mortar coal–granulitic coal–flaky coal). The extent of tectonic impact varies greatly between these two stages. In weak brittle deformation stage, tectonic stress has little impact on coal pore structure. The mean pore number increases slowly, and the mean pore size decreases slowly. In this stage, half of the pore number increment is provided by macropores of 100–200 nm diameter. In strong brittle deformation stage, tectonic stress has a major impact on coal pore structure. The mean pore number increases quickly, and the mean pore size decreases quickly. Most of the pore number increment comes from mesopores of 10–50 nm diameter and macropores of 50–100 nm diameter. In addition, the Young’s modulus of primary coal and different brittle TDCs varies from 1.5 to 2.0 GPa. In weak brittle deformation stage, the Young’s modulus of different samples levels off. While in strong brittle deformation stage, the Young’s modulus increases gradually. Combined with former studies, it is inferred that tectonic stress can influence coal’s Young’s modulus by transforming its chemical structure.

Highlights

  • Coal is an organic-rich sedimentary rock formed by plant debris under high temperature and high pressure

  • The pore number increases slightly compared to primary coal (Figure 5B)

  • The pore number increases gradually, and the mean pore size decreases with enhancing tectonic deformation

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Summary

Introduction

Coal is an organic-rich sedimentary rock formed by plant debris under high temperature and high pressure. Commonly-used methods to characterize nanopores include scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray computed tomography (CT), atomic force microscopy (AFM), high-pressure mercury injection (HPMI), low-temperature N2/CO2 adsorption (LTN2A/LTCO2A), synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). Among these methods, AFM has gained more attention in recent years because of its convenience (Zhu 2014; Pan et al, 2015a; Wang et al, 2017; Jiao et al, 2018; Liu et al, 2019; Zhao et al, 2019; Li et al, 2020). Few AFM studies have concerned the nanopore structure in different TDCs

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