Minerals (Nov 2023)

Evolution Mechanism of Microscopic Pore System in Coal-Bearing Marine–Continental Transitional Shale with Increasing Maturation

  • Jizhen Zhang,
  • Wei Lin,
  • Mingtao Li,
  • Jianguo Wang,
  • Xiao Xiao,
  • Yu Li,
  • Xiaochan Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/min13121482
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 12
p. 1482

Abstract

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The formation and evolution mechanisms of complex types and scales of marine–continental transitional shale pores are still indefinite, restricting the accurate evaluation of shale reservoir and the effective evaluation of coal-bearing marine–continental transitional shale gas resource quantity. Considering the Shanxi shale in Ordos basin of China as the research object, combining the FE-SEM images and petrophysical analysis, high-pressure mercury intrusion porosimetry, and CO2 and N2 adsorption–desorption experiments, the structure characteristics and differential evolution mechanisms of multiscale and multitype of coal-bearing shale pores were discussed. The results show that coal-bearing marine–continental transitional shales are rich in clay minerals and organic matters (OMs). Pores developed within organic matters, clay, and brittle minerals of coal-bearing shale have decreasing porosity values. OM pores are directly related to micro- and mesopores, with high specific surface areas, while the porosity of inorganic pores increases with the increasing pore diameter. The porosity of all pores shows a positive relationship with permeability, which changes periodically with the increase in maturity. Coal-bearing shale pores are mainly plate- and ink bottle-shaped, with multimodal pore size distributions. Controlled by both diagenesis and hydrocarbon generation, the evolution of coal-bearing shale pores could be mainly divided into four stages. Furthermore, the pore evolution model of coal-bearing marine–continental transitional shale was preliminarily constructed. This study would enhance the understanding of reservoir evolution of the coal-bearing shale and provide useful information for the assessment and evaluation of reservoir capacity.

Keywords