Pore connectivity characterization of shale using integrated wood's metal impregnation, microscopy, tomography, tracer mapping and porosimetry

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Jianhua Zhao
  • Qinhong Hu
  • Keyu Liu
  • Zhijun Jin
  • Stefan Dultz
  • Josef Kaufmann
  • Yuchen Fan

External Research Organisations

  • China University of Petroleum (East China)
  • University of Texas at Arlington
  • State Key Laboratory of Shale Oil and Gas Enrichment Mechanisms and Effective Development
  • SINOPEC
  • Swiss Federal Laboratories for Material Science and Technology (EMPA)
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number116248
JournalFuel
Volume259
Early online date1 Oct 2019
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2020

Abstract

The pore connectivity of tight shale reservoirs plays an essential role in the movement of shale gas and oil, however, the characteristics of connected pores in shale with a multi-scale and coupled pore-fracture system are poorly constrained. Working with typical American (Barnett and Eagle Ford) and Chinese (Longmaxi) shale samples in 2D/3D spaces at nano- to mm-scales, connective pores were intruded with a molten alloy (Wood's metal; WM) under a temperature of ~85 °C and high pressure (60, 300, and 600 MPa) conditions. After solidification of the alloy at room temperature, polished sections were used to map WM components by field emission-scanning electron microscopy (SEM), micro- and nano-X-ray tomography and laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). These tests were supplemented with mercury intrusion porosimetry (MIP) for pore-fracture throat size distribution. The shale matrix is generally characterized by low pore connectivity; however, the extent of connectivity within μm-sized and dispersed organic matter (OM) particles is high, with the observed WM-filled pore space ranging from 10% to 70% (averaged at 43%) for the Barnett Shale sample. The grain-edge fractures are important channels to connect multiple OM-hosted pore systems dispersed in shale matrix. Our work illustrates that shales exhibit a dual-connectivity behavior, with the effective porosity decreasing sharply as the distance from the sample boundary increases; the good pore connectivity zone away from the edge of sample is 500 μm under a pressure of 600 MPa for the Barnett Shale sample.

Keywords

    LA-ICP-MS tracer mapping, Mercury intrusion porosimetry, Pore connectivity, SEM microscopy, Wood's metal impregnation, X-ray tomography

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Pore connectivity characterization of shale using integrated wood's metal impregnation, microscopy, tomography, tracer mapping and porosimetry. / Zhao, Jianhua; Hu, Qinhong; Liu, Keyu et al.
In: Fuel, Vol. 259, 116248, 01.01.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Zhao J, Hu Q, Liu K, Jin Z, Dultz S, Kaufmann J et al. Pore connectivity characterization of shale using integrated wood's metal impregnation, microscopy, tomography, tracer mapping and porosimetry. Fuel. 2020 Jan 1;259:116248. Epub 2019 Oct 1. doi: 10.1016/j.fuel.2019.116248
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title = "Pore connectivity characterization of shale using integrated wood's metal impregnation, microscopy, tomography, tracer mapping and porosimetry",
abstract = "The pore connectivity of tight shale reservoirs plays an essential role in the movement of shale gas and oil, however, the characteristics of connected pores in shale with a multi-scale and coupled pore-fracture system are poorly constrained. Working with typical American (Barnett and Eagle Ford) and Chinese (Longmaxi) shale samples in 2D/3D spaces at nano- to mm-scales, connective pores were intruded with a molten alloy (Wood's metal; WM) under a temperature of ~85 °C and high pressure (60, 300, and 600 MPa) conditions. After solidification of the alloy at room temperature, polished sections were used to map WM components by field emission-scanning electron microscopy (SEM), micro- and nano-X-ray tomography and laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). These tests were supplemented with mercury intrusion porosimetry (MIP) for pore-fracture throat size distribution. The shale matrix is generally characterized by low pore connectivity; however, the extent of connectivity within μm-sized and dispersed organic matter (OM) particles is high, with the observed WM-filled pore space ranging from 10% to 70% (averaged at 43%) for the Barnett Shale sample. The grain-edge fractures are important channels to connect multiple OM-hosted pore systems dispersed in shale matrix. Our work illustrates that shales exhibit a dual-connectivity behavior, with the effective porosity decreasing sharply as the distance from the sample boundary increases; the good pore connectivity zone away from the edge of sample is 500 μm under a pressure of 600 MPa for the Barnett Shale sample.",
keywords = "LA-ICP-MS tracer mapping, Mercury intrusion porosimetry, Pore connectivity, SEM microscopy, Wood's metal impregnation, X-ray tomography",
author = "Jianhua Zhao and Qinhong Hu and Keyu Liu and Zhijun Jin and Stefan Dultz and Josef Kaufmann and Yuchen Fan",
note = "Funding Information: This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 41802141 and 41830431 ), Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province (No. ZR2019QD009 ), the Foundation of State Key Laboratory of Shale Oil and Gas Enrichment Mechanisms and Effective Development (No. 3355007-18-ZC0613-0105 ) at Wuxi Institute of Petroleum Geology, Sinopec Petroleum Exploration & Production Research Institute, and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No. 18CX02006A ). We would like to thank Texas Bureau of Economic Geology and Jianghan Oilfield Company of SINOPEC for providing shale core samples. ",
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T1 - Pore connectivity characterization of shale using integrated wood's metal impregnation, microscopy, tomography, tracer mapping and porosimetry

AU - Zhao, Jianhua

AU - Hu, Qinhong

AU - Liu, Keyu

AU - Jin, Zhijun

AU - Dultz, Stefan

AU - Kaufmann, Josef

AU - Fan, Yuchen

N1 - Funding Information: This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 41802141 and 41830431 ), Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province (No. ZR2019QD009 ), the Foundation of State Key Laboratory of Shale Oil and Gas Enrichment Mechanisms and Effective Development (No. 3355007-18-ZC0613-0105 ) at Wuxi Institute of Petroleum Geology, Sinopec Petroleum Exploration & Production Research Institute, and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No. 18CX02006A ). We would like to thank Texas Bureau of Economic Geology and Jianghan Oilfield Company of SINOPEC for providing shale core samples.

PY - 2020/1/1

Y1 - 2020/1/1

N2 - The pore connectivity of tight shale reservoirs plays an essential role in the movement of shale gas and oil, however, the characteristics of connected pores in shale with a multi-scale and coupled pore-fracture system are poorly constrained. Working with typical American (Barnett and Eagle Ford) and Chinese (Longmaxi) shale samples in 2D/3D spaces at nano- to mm-scales, connective pores were intruded with a molten alloy (Wood's metal; WM) under a temperature of ~85 °C and high pressure (60, 300, and 600 MPa) conditions. After solidification of the alloy at room temperature, polished sections were used to map WM components by field emission-scanning electron microscopy (SEM), micro- and nano-X-ray tomography and laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). These tests were supplemented with mercury intrusion porosimetry (MIP) for pore-fracture throat size distribution. The shale matrix is generally characterized by low pore connectivity; however, the extent of connectivity within μm-sized and dispersed organic matter (OM) particles is high, with the observed WM-filled pore space ranging from 10% to 70% (averaged at 43%) for the Barnett Shale sample. The grain-edge fractures are important channels to connect multiple OM-hosted pore systems dispersed in shale matrix. Our work illustrates that shales exhibit a dual-connectivity behavior, with the effective porosity decreasing sharply as the distance from the sample boundary increases; the good pore connectivity zone away from the edge of sample is 500 μm under a pressure of 600 MPa for the Barnett Shale sample.

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