The identification of shale porosity is of fundamental significance for evaluating reservoir quality in gas-shale plays, where the various methods rarely discern the adsorbed porosity and free porosity. Comprehensive measuring campaigns, as well as reliable isothermal adsorption data sets, show that the adsorbed porosity and free porosity can be validly identified by using 1H NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) and isothermal adsorption experiments. Here, we show that the T2 distribution of individual T2 peaks in “CH4-saturated shale”, adsorbed film density, and Boyle’s law can be applied to calculate the adsorbed porosity, free porosity, and total porosity. We estimated the adsorbed porosity and found that NMR measurements have remarkable capacity dynamics for characterizing CH4 saturation in shale samples. Furthermore, the adsorbed film density can be optimized by isothermal adsorption data. The novel method established in this paper directly computes the adsorption film density according to the physical characteristics of the measured isotherm adsorption. The purpose of this investigation is to unravel some of the mysteries surrounding the assessment of the adsorbed and free porosities of unconventional hydrocarbon development. The integrated analysis of these measurements helps us to better understand the adsorbed porosity, free porosity, and total porosity of samples from conventional and unconventional shale plays.
Read full abstract