Shale/tight gas plays an increasingly
important role to meet the
growing global energy demand and reduce carbon emissions. Unlike conventional
reservoirs, shale formations are subject to rock heterogeneity and
have pore size distributions ranging from sub-1 nm to a few micrometers.
Thanks to the large number of nanosized pores, adsorbed methane capacity
plays a dominant role in total shale gas-in-place. Methane adsorption
behaviors can vary drastically in micropores and mesopores, and rock
surface type may also greatly affect its adsorption. In this review,
we provide a systematic discussion on measurements of shale rock properties
including rock compositions and pore structures such as specific surface
area (SSA) and pore size distribution (PSD), which are important parameters
for methane adsorption in shale nanoporous media. We also provide
in-depth discussions on experimental measurements on methane (excess)
adsorption in shale nanoporous media, methane adsorption behavior
characterization based on molecular simulations, and various excess-adsorption-to-absolute-adsorption
conversion methods. We pay particular attention to the assumptions
and working mechanisms proposed in various interpretation methods
which are embedded in pore structures (SSA and PSD) and absolute adsorption
characterizations. In the end, we summarize the key challenges in
the methane adsorption characterization in shale media.
Accurate characterization of the bubble point pressure of hydrocarbon mixtures under nanoconfinement is crucial to the prediction of ultimate oil recovery and well productivity of shale/tight oil reservoirs. Unlike conventional reservoirs, shale has an extensive network of tiny pores in the range of a few nanometers. In nanopores, the properties of hydrocarbon fluids deviate from those in bulk because of significant surface adsorption. Many previous theoretical works use a conventional equation of state model coupled with capillary pressure to study the nanoconfinement effect. Without including the inhomogeneous molecular density distributions in nanoconfinement, these previous approaches predict only slightly reduced bubble points. In this work, we use density functional theory to study the effect of nanoconfinement on the hydrocarbon mixture bubble point pressure by explicitly considering fluid−surface interactions and inhomogeneous density distributions in nanopores. We find that as system pressure decreases, while lighter components are continuously released from the nanopores, heavier components accumulate within. The bubble point pressure of nanoconfined hydrocarbon mixtures is thus significantly suppressed from the bulk bubble point to below the bulk dew point, in line with our previous experiments. When bulk fluids are in a two-phase, the confined hydrocarbon fluids are in a single liquid-like phase. As pore size increases, bubble point pressure of confined fluids increases and hydrocarbon average density in nanopores approaches the liquid-phase density in bulk when bulk is in a two-phase region. For a finite volume bulk bath, we find that because of the competitive adsorption in nanopores, the bulk bubble point pressure increases in line with a previous experimental work. Our work demonstrates how mixture dynamics and nanopore−bulk partitioning influence phase behavior in nanoconfinement and enables the accurate estimation of hydrocarbon mixture bubble point pressure in shale nanopores.
Surface area is an important parameter
for the estimation of methane
(CH4) adsorption in shale nanoporous media. Kerogen, as
the main constituent of shale organic matters, has exceptionally high
surface area due to extensive nanoscale pores. The Brunauer–Emmett–Teller
(BET) method has been extensively used to characterize the surface
area of various porous materials. However, its applicability for the
surface area characterization of kerogen mesopores has not been investigated
yet. In this work, the effect of geometrical and energetical heterogeneity
on N2 adsorption isotherms and the subsequent BET surface
area (S
BET) characterization is studied
by using grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations. We find that N2 adsorption sites are mainly within the “basin”
and “valley” regions on kerogen surfaces, while in the
“ridge” regions, its adsorption rarely takes place at
77 K from 0.005 to 0.05 bar. On the other hand, surface chemistry
shows a significant effect on external potential and N2 adsorption amount. In addition, while S
BET agrees well with geometric surface area (S
geo) in graphite mesopores, in kerogen and pseudokerogen mesopores, S
BET is generally lower than S
geo. Interestingly, for our samples, S
BET correlates well with CH4 excess adsorption
in kerogen mesopores at 333.15 K and 300 bar, outperforming S
geo. This work provides some crucially important
fundamental understanding about the S
BET characterization of kerogen mesopores which can guide the prediction
of CH4 adsorption capacity in kerogen nanoporous media
and the estimation of shale gas-in-place.
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