--> Critical Relationships between Vitrinite Reflectance and Petroleum Formation
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2014 Rocky Mountain Section AAPG Annual Meeting

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Critical Relationships between Previous HitVitriniteNext Hit Previous HitReflectanceNext Hit and Petroleum Formation

Abstract

Previous HitVitriniteNext Hit Previous HitreflectanceNext Hit (%Ro) is a critical parameter in determining the amount of thermal stress (temperature and time) a source rock experienced during its burial history. Increasing Previous HitreflectanceNext Hit of Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit is attributed to the growth of aromatic-ring clusters that results in their gradual alignment with increasing thermal stress. This process represents bond formation, as opposed to bond breaking in the process of petroleum formation. As a result, reaction kinetics for Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit Previous HitreflectanceNext Hit are not the same as those for petroleum formation. For example, oil generation from high organic sulfur-bearing kerogen starts oil generation at a low thermal stress (<0.5 %Ro), and low organic sulfur-bearing kerogen starts oil generation at a high thermal stress (>0.8 %Ro). Therefore, it is critical to have good oil-generation kinetic parameters that can be applied in a thermal history that is based on Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit Previous HitreflectanceNext Hit. This variable relationship between Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit Previous HitreflectanceNext Hit and petroleum formation has been shown to be critical in the onshore Gulf Coast, Western Canada Sedimentary Basin, Mesopotamian Basin, Rocky Mountain basins, California Coastal basins, and Polish Carpathians. The variability between Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit Previous HitreflectanceNext Hit and petroleum formation may also be accentuated by the occurrence of so-called suppressed Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit. The Previous HitreflectanceNext Hit of this Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit increases significantly slower than that of Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit from humic coals subjected to the same thermal stress. For example, a thermal stress capable of increasing the Previous HitreflectanceNext Hit of typical Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit from 0.5 to 1.0 %Ro may only increase from 0.5 to 0.6 %Ro for suppressed Previous HitvitriniteNext Hit. Therefore, it becomes critical to know whether a Previous HitreflectanceNext Hit value is suppressed in determining the thermal history of a source rock and the boundaries for its primary (source-rock sourced) and secondary (oil-cracking sourced) gas generation. Source rocks with suppressed Previous HitvitriniteTop have been observed in the Phosphoria Formation, Woodford Shale, Bakken Shale, and Alum Shale.