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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
DOI: 10.1306/10261817272
A model for
porosity
evolution in shale reservoirs: An example from the Upper Devonian Duvernay
Formation
, Western Canada Sedimentary Basin
porosity
evolution in shale reservoirs: An example from the Upper Devonian Duvernay
Formation
, Western Canada Sedimentary Basin
Tian Dong,1 Nicholas B. Harris,2 Julia M. McMillan,3 Cory E. Twemlow,4 Brent R. Nassichuk,5 and David L. Bish6
1Key Laboratory of Tectonics and Petroleum Resources, China University of Geosciences, Ministry of Education, Wuhan, China; Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
2Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
3Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
4Trican Geological Solutions, Ltd., Calgary, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
5Trican Geological Solutions, Ltd., Calgary, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
6Department of Geological Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana; [email protected]
ABSTRACT
The influence of thermal maturity on
porosity
in shale samples from the Upper Devonian Duvernay
Formation
is examined. The samples span a maturity range from immature to the wet gas window.
Porosity
decreases from immature to the oil window, primarily because of compaction. Relatively high
porosity
of wet gas window samples is ascribed to
formation
of secondary organic pores, feldspar dissolution pores, and primary pore
preservation
by the quartz framework. The final decline in the
porosity
of the dry gas window samples is explained by greater compaction, the disappearance of secondary organic pores, and feldspar dissolution pores.
Porosity
correlates positively to quartz content and negatively to
carbonate
content; no relationship was evident between
porosity
and clay or total organic carbon content. No obvious correlations exist between rock composition and permeability except that SiO2 content shows a weakly positive correlation to permeability. Permeability is highest in immature samples, which have the greatest pore and pore-throat sizes. Nitrogen adsorption and mercury injection analysis show that pore and pore-throat sizes decrease with increasing maturity.
Visible pores, imaged by scanning electron microscopy and helium ion microscopy, exist as organic pores, including bubblelike pores developed within organic matter (OM) and fissure-type pores, intraparticle pores mainly developed within
carbonate
grains, and interparticle pores either within a clay-rich matrix or between rigid mineral grains. In immature samples, the primary pores are interparticle pores between clay minerals and other mineral grains. The OM fissures are ubiquitous in oil window samples, and secondary bubblelike OM–hosted pores are well developed within gas window samples.
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