Abstract

Micro-scale sealed vessel (MSSV) pyrolysis experiments have been conducted at temperatures of 150, 200, 250, 300, 330 and 350°C for various times on a thermally immature Type II-S kerogen from the Maastrichtian Jurf ed Darawish Oil Shale (Jordan) in order to study the origin of low-molecular-weight (LMW) alkylthiophenes. These experiments indicated that the LMW alkylthiophenes usually encountered in the flash pyrolysates of sulphur-rich kerogens are also produced at much lower pyrolysis temperatures (i.e. as low as 150°C) as the major (apart from hydrogen sulfide) sulphur-containing pyrolysis products. MSSV pyrolysis of a long-chain alkylthiophene and an alkylbenzene indicated that at 300°C for 72 h no β-cleavage leading to generation of LMW alkylated thiophenes and benzene occurs. In combination with the substantial production of LMW alkylthiophenes with a linear carbon skeleton at these conditions, this indicated that these thiophenes are predominantly formed by thermal degradation of multiple (poly)sulfide-bound linear C 5–C 7 skeletons, which probably mainly originate from sulphurisation of carbohydrates during early diagenesis. LMW alkylthiophenes with linear carbon skeletons seem to be unstable at MSSV pyrolysis temperatures of ≥330°C either due to thermal degradation or to methyl transfer reactions. LMW alkylthiophenes with a branched carbon skeleton most likely derive from both multiple (poly)sulfide-bound branched C 5–C 7 skeletons and alkylthiophene units present in the kerogen.

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