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Effect of Kerogen Thermal Maturity on Methane Adsorption Capacity: A Molecular Modeling Approach

The presence of kerogen in source rocks gives rise to a plethora of potential gas storage mechanisms. Proper estimation of the gas reserve requires knowledge of the quantities of free and adsorbed gas in rock pores and kerogen. Traditional methods of reserve estimation such as the volumetric and mat...

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Autores principales: Alafnan, Saad, Solling, Theis, Mahmoud, Mohamed
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7464280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32824866
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25163764
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author Alafnan, Saad
Solling, Theis
Mahmoud, Mohamed
author_facet Alafnan, Saad
Solling, Theis
Mahmoud, Mohamed
author_sort Alafnan, Saad
collection PubMed
description The presence of kerogen in source rocks gives rise to a plethora of potential gas storage mechanisms. Proper estimation of the gas reserve requires knowledge of the quantities of free and adsorbed gas in rock pores and kerogen. Traditional methods of reserve estimation such as the volumetric and material balance approaches are insufficient because they do not consider both the free and adsorbed gas compartments present in kerogens. Modified versions of these equations are based on adding terms to account for hydrocarbons stored in kerogen. None of the existing models considered the effect of kerogen maturing on methane gas adsorption. In this work, a molecular modeling was employed to explore how thermal maturity impacts gas adsorption in kerogen. Four different macromolecules of kerogen were included to mimic kerogens of different maturity levels; these were folded to more closely resemble the nanoporous kerogen structures of source rocks. These structures form the basis of the modeling necessary to assess the adsorption capacity as a function of the structure. The number of double bonds plus the number and type of heteroatoms (O, S, and N) were found to influence the final configuration of the kerogen structures, and hence their capacity to host methane molecules. The degree of aromaticity increased with the maturity level within the same kerogen type. The fraction of aromaticity gives rise to the polarity. We present an empirical mathematical relationship that makes possible the estimation of the adsorption capacity of kerogen based on the degree of polarity. Variations in kerogen adsorption capacity have significant implications on the reservoir scale. The general trend obtained from the molecular modeling was found to be consistent with experimental measurements done on actual kerogen samples. Shale samples with different kerogen content and with different maturity showed that shales with immature kerogen have small methane adsorption capacity compared to shales with mature kerogen. In this study, it is shown for the first time that the key factor to control natural gas adsorption is the kerogen maturity not the kerogen content.
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spelling pubmed-74642802020-09-04 Effect of Kerogen Thermal Maturity on Methane Adsorption Capacity: A Molecular Modeling Approach Alafnan, Saad Solling, Theis Mahmoud, Mohamed Molecules Article The presence of kerogen in source rocks gives rise to a plethora of potential gas storage mechanisms. Proper estimation of the gas reserve requires knowledge of the quantities of free and adsorbed gas in rock pores and kerogen. Traditional methods of reserve estimation such as the volumetric and material balance approaches are insufficient because they do not consider both the free and adsorbed gas compartments present in kerogens. Modified versions of these equations are based on adding terms to account for hydrocarbons stored in kerogen. None of the existing models considered the effect of kerogen maturing on methane gas adsorption. In this work, a molecular modeling was employed to explore how thermal maturity impacts gas adsorption in kerogen. Four different macromolecules of kerogen were included to mimic kerogens of different maturity levels; these were folded to more closely resemble the nanoporous kerogen structures of source rocks. These structures form the basis of the modeling necessary to assess the adsorption capacity as a function of the structure. The number of double bonds plus the number and type of heteroatoms (O, S, and N) were found to influence the final configuration of the kerogen structures, and hence their capacity to host methane molecules. The degree of aromaticity increased with the maturity level within the same kerogen type. The fraction of aromaticity gives rise to the polarity. We present an empirical mathematical relationship that makes possible the estimation of the adsorption capacity of kerogen based on the degree of polarity. Variations in kerogen adsorption capacity have significant implications on the reservoir scale. The general trend obtained from the molecular modeling was found to be consistent with experimental measurements done on actual kerogen samples. Shale samples with different kerogen content and with different maturity showed that shales with immature kerogen have small methane adsorption capacity compared to shales with mature kerogen. In this study, it is shown for the first time that the key factor to control natural gas adsorption is the kerogen maturity not the kerogen content. MDPI 2020-08-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7464280/ /pubmed/32824866 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25163764 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Alafnan, Saad
Solling, Theis
Mahmoud, Mohamed
Effect of Kerogen Thermal Maturity on Methane Adsorption Capacity: A Molecular Modeling Approach
title Effect of Kerogen Thermal Maturity on Methane Adsorption Capacity: A Molecular Modeling Approach
title_full Effect of Kerogen Thermal Maturity on Methane Adsorption Capacity: A Molecular Modeling Approach
title_fullStr Effect of Kerogen Thermal Maturity on Methane Adsorption Capacity: A Molecular Modeling Approach
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Kerogen Thermal Maturity on Methane Adsorption Capacity: A Molecular Modeling Approach
title_short Effect of Kerogen Thermal Maturity on Methane Adsorption Capacity: A Molecular Modeling Approach
title_sort effect of kerogen thermal maturity on methane adsorption capacity: a molecular modeling approach
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7464280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32824866
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25163764
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