TitleEffect of Water Saturation on Gas-Accessible Effective Pore Space in Gas Shales
AuthorsChen, Lei
Liu, Keyu
Xu, Liangwei
Jiang, Shu
Fu, Yonghong
Tan, Jingqiang
Fan, Yuchen
AffiliationChina Univ Petr East China, Shandong Prov Key Lab Deep Oil & Gas, Qingdao 266580, Peoples R China
China Univ Petr East China, Sch Geosci, Qingdao 266580, Peoples R China
Univ Utah, Energy Geosci Inst, Salt Lake City, UT 84108 USA
Peking Univ, Sch Earth & Space Sci, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China
China Univ Geosci, Key Lab Tecton & Petr Resources, Minist Educ, Wuhan 430074, Peoples R China
Southwest Petr Univ, Sch Geosci & Technol, Chengdu 610500, Peoples R China
Cent South Univ, Sch Geosci & Info Phys, Changsha 410012, Peoples R China
KeywordsSOUTHERN SICHUAN BASIN
ORGANIC-RICH SHALES
METHANE ADSORPTION
BARNETT SHALE
NMR
BEHAVIOR
SYSTEMS
PERMEABILITY
HAYNESVILLE
EVOLUTION
Issue Date7-Jul-2022
PublisherLITHOSPHERE
AbstractThe existence and content of water will certainly affect the effective pore space of shales and therefore is a key point for the evaluation of in-situ gas content and gas flow capacity of shale reservoirs. In order to reasonably evaluate the gas storage and flow capacities of water-bearing shale reservoirs, the effect of water on the effective pore space of shales needs to be understood. In this study, the Upper Permian Longtan shale in the southeastern Sichuan Basin, China, was selected as an example to conduct nuclear magnetic resonance cryoporometry (NMRC) measurements under different water saturation levels. The gas-accessible effective pore spaces in shales under different water saturation levels were quantified, and the effect of water saturation on gas-accessible effective pore space in shales was investigated. The results show that water plays an important role in the gas-accessible effective pore space of shales. When the Longtan shale increases from a dry state to a water saturation of 65%, 75%, and 90%, the gas-accessible effective pore volume decreases by 35%-60% (average 46.3%), 50%-70% (average 58.8%), and 65%-82% (average 75.8%), respectively. Water has an effect on the gas-accessible effective pore space regardless of pore size, and the effect is the strongest in the 4-100nm range, which may be mainly due to the high content of clay minerals in the Longtan shale. Our studies are of important theoretical significance and application prospects for accurately evaluating the gas-accessible effective pore space of gas shales under actual geological conditions.
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/669376
ISSN1941-8264
DOI10.2113/2022/1939833
IndexedSCI(E)
Appears in Collections:地球与空间科学学院

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