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The effect of oil expulsion or retention on further thermal degradation of kerogen at the high maturity stage: A pyrolysis study of type II kerogen from Pingliang shale,China
Institution:1. Geological Survey of Canada, Calgary, Canada;2. Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration and Development, Beijing, China;1. China State Key Laboratory of Shale Oil and Shale Gas Resources and Effective Development, Sinopec Petroleum Exploration and Production Research Institute, 31 Xueyuan Road, Haidian District, Beijing 100083, China;2. Geological Survey of Canada, 3303-33 Street NW, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;3. China University of Petroleum (Beijing), 18 Fuxue Road, Changping District, Beijng 102249, China;1. Department of Geological Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405-1405, USA;2. Indiana Geological Survey, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405-2208, USA
Abstract:High maturity oil and gas are usually generated after primary oil expulsion from source rocks, especially from oil prone type I/II kerogen. However, the detailed impacts of oil expulsion, or retention in source rock on further thermal degradation of kerogen at the high maturity stage remain unknown. In the present study, we collected an Ordovician Pingliang shale sample containing type II kerogen. The kerogens, which had previously generated and expelled oil and those which had not, were prepared and pyrolyzed in a closed system, to observe oil expulsion or oil retention effects on later oil and gas generation from kerogen. The results show that oil expulsion and retention strongly impacts on further oil and gas generation in terms of both the amount and composition in the high maturity stage. Gas production will be reduced by 50% when the expulsion coefficient reaches 58%, and gas from oil-expelled kerogen (less oil retained) is much drier than that from fresh kerogen. The oil expulsion also causes n-alkanes and gas compounds to have heavier carbon isotopic compositions at high maturity stages. The enrichment of 13C in n-alkanes and gas hydrocarbons are 1‰ and 4–6‰ respectively, compared to fresh kerogen. Oil expulsion may act as open system opposite to the oil retention that influences the data pattern in crossplots of δ13C2–δ13C3 versus C2/C3, δ13C2–δ13C3 versus δ13C1 and δ13C1–δ13C2 versus ln(C1/C2), which are widely used for identification of gas from kerogen cracking or oil cracking. These results suggest that the reserve estimation and gas/source correlation in deep burial basins should consider the proportion of oil retention to oil expulsion the source rocks have experienced.
Keywords:Oil expulsion or retention  Hydrocarbon generation  High maturity stage  Oil and gas composition  Isotopic signature
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