Multi-scale detection of organic and inorganic signatures provides insights into gas shale properties and evolution

Organic geochemical analyses, including solvent extraction or pyrolysis, followed by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry, are generally conducted on bulk gas shale samples to evaluate their source and reservoir properties. While organic petrology has been directed at unravelling the matrix comp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemie der Erde 2010-01, Vol.70 (3), p.119-133
Hauptverfasser: Bernard, Sylvain, Horsfield, Brian, Schulz, Hans-Martin, Schreiber, Anja, Wirth, Richard, Anh Vu, Tiem Thi, Perssen, Ferdinand, Könitzer, Sven, Volk, Herbert, Sherwood, Neil, Fuentes, David
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Organic geochemical analyses, including solvent extraction or pyrolysis, followed by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry, are generally conducted on bulk gas shale samples to evaluate their source and reservoir properties. While organic petrology has been directed at unravelling the matrix composition and textures of these economically important unconventional resources, their spatial variability in chemistry and structure is still poorly documented at the sub-micrometre scale. Here, a combination of techniques including transmission electron microscopy and a synchrotron-based microscopy tool, scanning transmission X-ray microscopy, have been used to characterize at a multiple length scale an overmature organic-rich calcareous mudstone from northern Germany. We document multi-scale chemical and mineralogical heterogeneities within the sample, from the millimetre down to the nanometre-scale. From the detection of different types of bitumen and authigenic minerals associated with the organic matter, we show that the multi-scale approach used in this study may provide new insights into gaseous hydrocarbon generation/retention processes occurring within gas shales and may shed new light on their thermal history.
ISSN:0009-2819
1611-5864
DOI:10.1016/j.chemer.2010.05.005