Scientific Reports (May 2022)

Geochemical evidence for the internal migration of gas condensate in a major unconventional tight petroleum system

  • James M. Wood,
  • Jaime Cesar,
  • Omid H. Ardakani,
  • Arka Rudra,
  • Hamed Sanei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-11963-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Unconventional petroleum systems go through multiple episodes of internal hydrocarbon migration in response to evolving temperature and pressure conditions during burial and uplift. Migrated fluid signatures can be recognized using stable carbon isotope and PVT compositional data from produced samples representative of in-situ petroleum fluids. Such samples, however, are seldom collected due to operational complexity and high cost. Here, we use carbon isotope and PVT data from co-produced hydrocarbon gas and liquid to provide evidence for widespread migration of gas-condensate in the Montney unconventional petroleum system of western Canada. Extended C1–C33 isotopic profiles exhibit convex upward signatures with C4–C5 maxima at low molecular weight, and increasing or nearly uniform signatures at high molecular weight. Additionally, recombination PVT compositional data show C6–C15 condensate concentrations are higher than expected for unmodified oils. The combined convex upward and increasing or uniform isotopic signatures are interpreted as mixing profiles formed by the introduction of high-maturity gas-condensate (C1–C15) to shallower zones with in-situ hydrocarbon fluids of lower thermal maturity. The recognition of widespread gas-condensate migration adds to the complex history of internal hydrocarbon migration within the Montney tight-petroleum system including previously identified migration episodes of early oil and late-stage methane-rich gas.