Abstract

Accurate quantification of the coexistence of adsorbed and free gas content holds the utmost significance for estimating gas-in-place resources and predicting gas production dynamics. In this study, we conducted real-time isothermal adsorption experiments and NMR fluid monitoring on stress-confining core samples, from the Zhengzhuang Block's No.3 coal seam in the southern Qinshui Basin. Our focus was on assessing multi-phase methane gas contents within coal under various pressure and temperature (P/T) conditions. By integrating experimental findings with adsorption potential theory and the SDR adsorption model, we developed comprehensive models for adsorbed, free, and total gas contents as functions of P/T and water/gas volume saturation. Utilizing these models, we predicted vertical variations in adsorbed and free gas contents within the coal seam. Our results revealed that the interplay between positive reservoir pressure effects and adverse reservoir temperature effects influenced both adsorbed and free methane gases. With increasing burial depth, the influence of pressure on adsorbed gas diminished, while temperature effects became more pronounced. Conversely, free gas content responded noticeably to reservoir pressure, with temperature exerting a marginal influence. Additionally, we performed a numerical simulation to reconstruct the thermal history, burial trajectory, and evolution of reservoir pressure for the No.3 coal seam. The simulation results served as foundational data for understanding the evolution of free and adsorbed gas contents across different geological epochs within the in-situ reservoir. Our findings unveiled a four-stage evolutionary progression in both adsorbed and free gas contents, correlating with the uplift and subsidence of the coal seam. In conclusion, our study provides a conceptual model elucidating the intricate, deep-time evolution process and mechanisms governing the occurrence of multiphase gases across distinct geological epochs. The implications of this research are crucial for accurately evaluating gas-in-place resources and guiding the exploration and development of deep coalbed methane resources.

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