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Impacting Factors, Dynamic Process, and Correction of Adsorption Reduction in Shale Reservoir: A Case Study on Shale Samples from the Western Guizhou

[Image: see text] Adsorption reduction occurring during isothermal experiment leads to the failure of telling the true adsorption capacity of shale reservoir. A correct understanding of this will be helpful in improving the accuracy of resource estimation and economic evaluation of shale gas reserve...

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Autores principales: Lu, Guanwen, Wei, Chongtao, Wang, Jilin, Meng, Ruiyan, Tamehe, Landry Soh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2020
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7315601/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32596597
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c01286
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author Lu, Guanwen
Wei, Chongtao
Wang, Jilin
Meng, Ruiyan
Tamehe, Landry Soh
author_facet Lu, Guanwen
Wei, Chongtao
Wang, Jilin
Meng, Ruiyan
Tamehe, Landry Soh
author_sort Lu, Guanwen
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Adsorption reduction occurring during isothermal experiment leads to the failure of telling the true adsorption capacity of shale reservoir. A correct understanding of this will be helpful in improving the accuracy of resource estimation and economic evaluation of shale gas reserves. Six shale samples were collected from the Permian Longtan Formation in the western Guizhou Province, China. Volumetric methane isotherm adsorption experiment and data processing were conducted in this research. The study investigates the effect of free space volume reduction (FSVR), excess adsorption amount conversion (EAAC), and blank test correction (BTC) on adsorption reduction, the understanding of the dynamic process of adsorption reduction, and the evaluation of the way of weakening and correcting this phenomenon. The conclusions are as follows. (1) Adsorption reduction does exist in the shale sample. The adsorption process of methane in the shale sample can be divided into the strong adsorption stage, approximate saturation stage, and adsorption reduction stage. (2) Shale adsorbing methane has a positive effect on the experimental adsorption amount. Comparatively, free space volume, excess adsorption amount, and blank test have negative effects. Adsorption reduction is the result of combined influence of positive and negative effects above. (3) At the first two stages of methane adsorption, the positive effect is greater than the negative effect, resulting in the hidden of adsorption reduction, and the experimental adsorption amount increases with the growth of experimental pressure. While at the adsorption reduction stage, the former effect is smaller than the latter, and their difference increases as the experimental pressure increases. It leads to the occurrence of adsorption reduction, and the phenomenon becomes increasingly obvious. (4) FSVR has the strongest impact on the weakening of adsorption reduction, followed by EAAC and BTC. The adsorption reduction in shale reservoir can be corrected effectively by BTC and EAAC.
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spelling pubmed-73156012020-06-26 Impacting Factors, Dynamic Process, and Correction of Adsorption Reduction in Shale Reservoir: A Case Study on Shale Samples from the Western Guizhou Lu, Guanwen Wei, Chongtao Wang, Jilin Meng, Ruiyan Tamehe, Landry Soh ACS Omega [Image: see text] Adsorption reduction occurring during isothermal experiment leads to the failure of telling the true adsorption capacity of shale reservoir. A correct understanding of this will be helpful in improving the accuracy of resource estimation and economic evaluation of shale gas reserves. Six shale samples were collected from the Permian Longtan Formation in the western Guizhou Province, China. Volumetric methane isotherm adsorption experiment and data processing were conducted in this research. The study investigates the effect of free space volume reduction (FSVR), excess adsorption amount conversion (EAAC), and blank test correction (BTC) on adsorption reduction, the understanding of the dynamic process of adsorption reduction, and the evaluation of the way of weakening and correcting this phenomenon. The conclusions are as follows. (1) Adsorption reduction does exist in the shale sample. The adsorption process of methane in the shale sample can be divided into the strong adsorption stage, approximate saturation stage, and adsorption reduction stage. (2) Shale adsorbing methane has a positive effect on the experimental adsorption amount. Comparatively, free space volume, excess adsorption amount, and blank test have negative effects. Adsorption reduction is the result of combined influence of positive and negative effects above. (3) At the first two stages of methane adsorption, the positive effect is greater than the negative effect, resulting in the hidden of adsorption reduction, and the experimental adsorption amount increases with the growth of experimental pressure. While at the adsorption reduction stage, the former effect is smaller than the latter, and their difference increases as the experimental pressure increases. It leads to the occurrence of adsorption reduction, and the phenomenon becomes increasingly obvious. (4) FSVR has the strongest impact on the weakening of adsorption reduction, followed by EAAC and BTC. The adsorption reduction in shale reservoir can be corrected effectively by BTC and EAAC. American Chemical Society 2020-06-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7315601/ /pubmed/32596597 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c01286 Text en Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html) , which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Lu, Guanwen
Wei, Chongtao
Wang, Jilin
Meng, Ruiyan
Tamehe, Landry Soh
Impacting Factors, Dynamic Process, and Correction of Adsorption Reduction in Shale Reservoir: A Case Study on Shale Samples from the Western Guizhou
title Impacting Factors, Dynamic Process, and Correction of Adsorption Reduction in Shale Reservoir: A Case Study on Shale Samples from the Western Guizhou
title_full Impacting Factors, Dynamic Process, and Correction of Adsorption Reduction in Shale Reservoir: A Case Study on Shale Samples from the Western Guizhou
title_fullStr Impacting Factors, Dynamic Process, and Correction of Adsorption Reduction in Shale Reservoir: A Case Study on Shale Samples from the Western Guizhou
title_full_unstemmed Impacting Factors, Dynamic Process, and Correction of Adsorption Reduction in Shale Reservoir: A Case Study on Shale Samples from the Western Guizhou
title_short Impacting Factors, Dynamic Process, and Correction of Adsorption Reduction in Shale Reservoir: A Case Study on Shale Samples from the Western Guizhou
title_sort impacting factors, dynamic process, and correction of adsorption reduction in shale reservoir: a case study on shale samples from the western guizhou
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7315601/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32596597
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c01286
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