Geochemical evidence for secondary microbial gas in deep hot reservoirs of the Tarim Basin

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY(2022)

引用 2|浏览9
暂无评分
摘要
It is hard to determine secondary microbial gas from deep burial reservoirs with multiple generations of petroleum charge. Herein, oils at depths from 5000 m to 6500 m in the Ordovician carbonate reservoirs, Tarim basin, are found to have been biodegraded to secondary microbial gas. These oils experienced severe biodegradation and thus contain abundant 25-norhopanes and 17-nortricyclic terpanes. The associated gases have methane delta C-13(1) from 51.9 parts per thousand to 47.3% and delta H-2(1) from 327.8 parts per thousand to 192.4 parts per thousand, and CO2 delta C-13(CO2) from 0.7 parts per thousand to +15.3 parts per thousand. These features suggest that the gases are secondary microbial gas, generated predominantly via CO2 reduction with preferential reduction of C-13-depleted CO2 and contribution of methane hydrogen from formation water in closed environments. The secondary microbial gas may have generated from biodegradation of oils at reservoir temperatures of about <75 degrees C during the Late Permian, and has subsequently mixed with a later charge of non-biodegraded oils and wet gas during the Late Cretaceous. Consequently, the present gas shows relatively low dryness (C-1/Sigma C1-4 < 0.87) and has varied delta C-13(1) and delta H-2(1) values in methane. The study implies that the signatures of secondary microbial gas can easily be masked by thermogenic gas and thus more secondary microbial gas has yet to be identified.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Secondary microbial gas, Biodegradation, Methanogenesis, Mixing, Tarim Basin
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要