From Oil-Prone Source Rock to Gas-Producing Shale Reservoir – Geologic and Petrophysical Characterization of Unconventional Shale-Gas Reservoirs

ExxonMobil (United States)

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Abstract

Abstract Many currently producing shale-gas reservoirs are overmature oil-prone source rocks. Through burial and heating these reservoirs evolve from organic-matter-rich mud deposited in marine, lacustrine, or swamp environments. Key characterization parameters are: total organic carbon (TOC), maturity level (vitrinite reflectance), mineralogy, thickness, and organic matter type. Hydrogen-to-carbon (HI) and oxygen-to-carbon (OI) ratios are used to classify organic matter that ranges from oil-prone algal and herbaceous to gas-prone woody/coaly material. Although organic-matter-rich intervals can be hundreds of meters thick, vertical variability in TOC is high (<1–3 meters) and is controlled by…

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Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Source rock
  • Geology
  • Oil shale
  • Kerogen
  • Vitrinite
  • Petrophysics
  • Organic matter
  • Total organic carbon
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life below water
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