4.7 Article

Geochemical characteristics of the extremely high thermal maturity transitional shale gas in the Southern North China Basin (SNCB) and its differences with marine shale gas

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COAL GEOLOGY
Volume 194, Issue -, Pages 33-44

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.coal.2018.05.005

Keywords

Shale gas; Transitional facies; Marine facies; High thermal maturity; Southern North China Basin

Funding

  1. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2017M620850]
  2. Research on Shale Gas Resource Potential Evaluation Method and Exploration Technology [2016ZX05034]
  3. Evaluation and parameter optimization of shale gas resources in typical areas of South China

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A great number of studies have been carried out on the geochemical characteristics of marine shale gas from the lower Silurian Longmaxi Formation in the Sichuan Basin. However, a systematic study on geochemical and isotopic characteristics of transitional shale gas (gas from the alternating marine-terrigenous shale facies) has not been well addressed. In the present study, transitional shale gas from the lower Permian Shanxi (P(1)s) and Taiyuan (P(1)t) Formation in the Southern North China Basin (SNCB) were collected and analyzed for their geochemical and isotopic compositions. The hydrocarbon gases are dominated by methane, with small amounts of ethane, without propane and butane, which is consistent with the extremely high thermal maturity of the gas shales (R-o% values between 3.2 and 4.2%). Compared with marine shale gas, the relatively high non-hydrocarbon components may be associated with the humic source rocks. The delta C-13(1) values range from 31.6%o to -21.0 parts per thousand and the delta C-13(2) values range from -35.9 parts per thousand to -26.1 parts per thousand, the delta H-2(CH4) values range from -221 parts per thousand to -138 parts per thousand. These results indicate that the gases are of thermogenic origin, methane with anomalous heavy carbon isotopic and light hydrogen isotopic values was interpreted as redox reactions of gases with transition metals and water at maximum burial resulting in Rayleigh-type fractionation. The difficulties of identifying marine and transitional shale gas may be due to the complete or partial carbon isotopic reversal caused by secondary alteration and the extremely high thermal maturity of the gas shales. CO2 concentration and delta C-13(CO2) values suggest that CO2 in the transitional shale gas was mainly thermogenic origin and formed together with hydrocarbon generation. Furthermore, significant differences can be observed from the CO2 in different types of shale gas, CO2 in the transitional shale gas is mainly distributed in areas with CO2 > 5% and delta C-13(CO2) < -8 parts per thousand, while CO2 in the marine shale gas is mainly distributed in areas with CO2 < 5% and delta C-13(CO2) > -8 parts per thousand. The delta N-15(N-2) values and high illite and illite-smectite mixed day (I/S) content suggest that nitrogen in transitional shale gas was possibly generated during thermo-ammoniation of organic matter and/or the breakdown of NH4-rich clay minerals. In addition, based on the geochemical characteristics of marine and transitional shale gas, a geochemical pattern of shale gas is presented in this paper.

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