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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 22, No. 2, October 1979. Pages 2-2.

Abstract: Oil Expulsion-A Consequence of Oil Generation

By

Previous HitJamesTop A. Momper

In source beds, much of the oil-generating organic matter is concentrated along bedding surfaces. During the principal phase of oil generation, when adequate thermal energy is available, 25 to 30 wt. % of the organic matter commonly is converted to liquids, mainly bitumen with some water. Part of the bitumen is then thermally cracked to crude oil. Hydrocarbon gases with some CO2 and N2 are generated also; much of the water and CO2 is generated before oil is formed.

The release of fluids from organic matter causes a reduction in volume of the residual solid organic matter; however, this volume decrease is offset by the considerably greater volume of generated fluids. As a result, pressures increase greatly along sealed bedding surfaces. Internal (intrasource) migration of oil and gas occurs when local, transitory fluid pressures become sufficient to part the bedding laminae and to form or reopen near-vertical microfractures connecting the partings. Permeable migration pathways also may develop along laminae as a result of the reduced volume of the organic matter. Fluids are driven along permeable laminae and partings, into connecting, less pressurized laminae where two or more laminae converge, and along microfractures and faults within the source sequence. Eventually, high fluid pressures will develop in most parts of an actively generating source-rock section if the section is sealed and confined.

Two properties of argillaceous rocks that permit overpressuring are anisotropy and heterogeneity. Additionally, enough oil must be generated to increase fluid pressure sufficiently for local dilations to occur in oil-source rocks. This requires at least 0.5 wt. % of hydrogen-rich organic matter. In argillaceous source rocks, clay-sized quartz and clay provide brittle pressure and fluid seals, susceptible to microfracturing, on individual laminae. In carbonate-evaporite sequences, evaporites sealing laminae are less likely to fracture.

At a given generation site, dilation and fluid release are followed by a sharp reduction in pressure and closing of partings and fractures to further fluid movement. Pressure will again increase and dilation recur at a given generation rate until the fluid generation rate has diminished enough for the fluid pressure to remain below the dilation point, that is, the fluid pressure required to open or reopen any part of the system sufficiently for local internal fluid migration or expulsion.

A source-rock system functions much like a pressure cooker. It is self-opening and self-sealing. As liquids are expressed from a parting into a fracture, the pressure drops quickly and the fracture will close on the retained liquids, immobilizing them. Silica and/or calcite cement commonly are, precipitated along such fractures, both before and after oil migration. Immobilized oil devolatilizes, leaving a solid or semisolid residue. These materials enable resealed parts of the system to repressurize and refracture through the peak gas-generation phase. Thus, the generation of fluids can provide the means by which oil and gas are expelled from source rocks.

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