Wei Dang, Jin-Chuan Zhang, Xuan Tang, Xiao-Liang Wei, Zhong-Ming Li, Cheng-Hu Wang, Qian Chen, Chong Liu. Investigation of gas content of organic-rich shale: A case study from Lower Permian shale in southern North China Basin, central China[J]. Geoscience Frontiers, 2018, 9(2): 559-575. DOI: 10.1016/j.gsf.2017.05.009
Citation: Wei Dang, Jin-Chuan Zhang, Xuan Tang, Xiao-Liang Wei, Zhong-Ming Li, Cheng-Hu Wang, Qian Chen, Chong Liu. Investigation of gas content of organic-rich shale: A case study from Lower Permian shale in southern North China Basin, central China[J]. Geoscience Frontiers, 2018, 9(2): 559-575. DOI: 10.1016/j.gsf.2017.05.009

Investigation of gas content of organic-rich shale: A case study from Lower Permian shale in southern North China Basin, central China

  • Measuring gas content is an essential step in estimating the commerciality of gas reserves. In this study, eight shale core samples from the Mouye-1 well were measured using a homemade patented gas desorption apparatus to determine their gas contents. Due to the air contamination that is introduced into the desorption canister, a mathematical method was devised to correct the gas quantity and quality. Compared to the chemical compositions of desorbed gas, the chemical compositions of residual gas are somewhat different. In residual gas, carbon dioxide and nitrogen record a slight increase, and propane is first observed. This phenomenon may be related to the exposure time during the transportation of shale samples from the drilling site to the laboratory, as well as the differences in the mass, size and adsorptivity of different gas molecules. In addition to a series of conventional methods, including the USBM direct method and the Amoco Curve Fit (ACF) method, which were used here for lost gas content estimation, a Modified Curve Fit (MCF) method, based on the ‘bidisperse’ diffusion model, was established to estimate lost gas content. By fitting the ACF and MCF models to gas desorption data, we determined that the MCF method could reasonably describe the gas desorption data over the entire time period, whereas the ACF method failed. The failure of the ACF method to describe the gas desorption process may be related to its restrictive assumption of a single pore size within shale samples. In comparison to the indirect method, this study demonstrates that none of the three methods studied in this investigation (USBM, ACF and MCF) could individually estimate the lost gas contents of all shale samples and that the proportion of free gas relative to total gas has a significant effect on the estimation accuracy of the selected method. When the ratio of free gas to total gas is lower than 45%, the USBM method is the best for estimating the lost gas content, whereas when the ratio ranges from 45% to 75% or is more than 75%, the ACF and MCF methods, are the best options respectively.
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