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Predicting the Temperature of
Hydrocarbon
Expulsion
from Oil Asphaltene Kinetics and Oil Source Correlation:
A Case Study of South Cambay Basin, India*
By
Shishir Kant Saxena1, R.K.Saxena1, Rashmi Anand1, K.P.Singh1, Harvir Singh1, and R.R Singh1
Search and Discovery Article #40266 (2007)
Posted November 28, 2007
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Long Beach, California, April 1-4, 2007
Editor’s note: Please refer to “Petroleum Systems of the Mumbai Offshore Basin, India, by Goswami et al. (Search and Discovery Article #10154 (2007).
1Geochemistry Labs, KDM Institute of petroleum Exploration, Oil and Gas Corporation Ltd 9 Kaulagarh Road, Dehradun-248195, India ([email protected])
The oil asphaltene has structural similarity with
parent kerogen. The kinetic data based on actual data from the reservoir oil is
found to be a better method in reducing the risks associated with oil
exploration and assessing the petroleum generation characteristics. An attempt
has been made to assess the petroleum
expulsion
temperature/timing for
predicting the kitchen in South Cambay Basin using oil asphaltene kinetics.
The Gandhar field covers an area of about 800 km2 and is located on the rising northwestern flank of the Broach depression in the Jambusar-Broach block. The Olpad Formation was deposited during the Paleocene. The Eocene Cambay Shale, unconformably overlying the Olpad Formation, has excellent source rock characteristics. The Hazad Member of south Cambay Basin is a major hydrocarbon reservoir, and it consists of 12-individual sand units from GS-XII-GS-I.
The oil asphaltene kinetic/
expulsion
temperature studies have been carried out
on Rock Eval-6 instrument having Optikin and GENEX-1D software. The
saturate/aromatic biomarkers data and fatty acid studies are also integrated
with the present study. The Gandhar oils are placed into three groups. The group
C oils (GS-XII & GS-XI) indicate that the temperature of
expulsion
from
asphaltene kinetics (Tasph 90-112oC) corresponds to isothermal
sequence of source rock from 2500 to 800m). Group B (GS- IX-IV) oils indicate
that Tasph (119-132oC) corresponds to isothermal sequence of 2900 to
3200m, whereas Group A oils (GS-III-I) indicate that
expulsion
temperature
(141-142oC) corresponds to the 3600-3800m sedimentary sequence.
Asphaltene
expulsion
temperature data has shown positive correlation with
biomarker maturity data and fatty acid distribution pattern and good matching
with actual identified source rock units. The
expulsion
temperature determined
by light hydrocarbons has no correlation with asphaltene
expulsion
temperature.
This study will be very useful in fine-tuning the existing petroleum system
where source rock data is not available.
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The timing of hydrocarbon
Di Primo and Horsfield (2000) applied kinetic
concept to oil asphaltene for identification of specific source-rock
facies charging the reservoir in the Sonda de Cache area (Mexico) and
Snorre field (Norway). They did not share the same formation window as
that modeled for source-rock samples. In this context, Dieckmann et al.
(2001) linked asphaltene kinetics with characteristics of light
hydrocarbons. The
In the present paper, we focused on
Sample Selection and Study Area The oil samples were selected from 12 individual sand units of the Hazad Member, the main reservoir of Gandhar field, for asphaltene kinetics studies, light hydrocarbons, fatty acids, and molecular level analysis based on GC and GC-MS. Source-rock data of the study area is integrated with kinetic and maturity data.
Source Rock Development Status The effective source rock for commercial viable hydrocarbons in south Cambay Basin is the lower-middle Eocene Cambay Shale (Figure 2) which extends across the entire south Cambay Basin including Gulf of Cambay. The amount and type of organic matter and its level of thermal maturity indicate that the Cambay Shale is a good oil- and gas-prone source rock (TOC: 2.6%). The plot of HI against oxygen index (OI) indicates that the bulk of organic matter is of type III with some contribution from type II. Vitrinite reflectance, Tmax, and TTI data indicate that entire Cambay Shale is in the catagenetic stage.
The kinetic analysis was performed on about 3
mg of isolated asphaltene mixed with inert substance to make up 100 mg
sample on Rock Eval-6 at four different heating rates of 5, 10, 15 and
25oC from 180 to 650oC, using Optkin software. The
light hydrocarbons were analyzed on a whole oil sample diluted 1:1 with
dichloromethane. .The GC temperature programmed was started at 35oC,
held for 5 min., and then Ramp to 120oC at 1.1oC.The
Ctemp (oC) = 140+ 15{ln (2.4-DMP/2.3-DMP)}
For fatty acid isolation, 20g of crude oil was refluxed with 50 ml mixture of KOH and methanol (6%). The aqueous phase was washed 2-3 times with petroleum ether to remove non-acidic components. The aqueous phase was acidified with 6N HCl to make the solution acidic (pH 2-3). The acidic solution was extracted with petroleum ether to extract fatty acids. Extracted fatty acids from oils were methylated with 14% BF3-methanol mixture. Esterified fatty acids were resolved at GC-MS along with standards for identification. GC and GC-MS studies were conducted on saturate and aromatic fractions of oil for routine biomarker and MPI.
Results and Discussion The bottom hole temperature (BHT) recorded in studied wells varies between 110oC and 120oC. The API gravity of studied oils was in the range of 38-43o. The n-alkane profile indicates that these oils are normal oils, and there is no sign of biodegradation.
The objective of the study was to determine
temperature of
In order to compare the effects of the
calculated kinetics on the asphaltene degradation behavior, the
geological extrapolations were made using a constant heating rate of 3oK
per My. The fractions of reacted asphaltene were normalized to 100 and
are plotted as a function of geological temperature using a constant
heating rate. The wide variation in the asphaltene degradation behaviour
indicates the difference of organic matter richness and their types. The
asphaltene degradation of GS-I, GS-II, GSXI and GS-XII are smooth,
indicating homogenous distribution of organic matter while GS-VIII shows
wide range of temperature variation. The
Based on biomarker, fatty acid, and asphaltene
temperature ranges, Gandhar oils can be classified into three distinct
groups . The asphaltene Comparison of temperatures calculated from asphaltene kinetics and those calculated from light hydrocarbons (Table 1) shows variation; namely in Group A oils, Ctemp<Tasph (124oC vs. 142oC), while Group B oils show both Ctemp<Tasph and Ctemp>Tasph and Group C oils show Ctemp>Tasph. From the integration of light hydrocarbons, classical biomarkers ratios, and fatty acid distribution pattern it may be inferred that there were multiple source rocks and charging of the Hazad reservoirs. The hydrocarbons from deep source rock are getting mixed with low-maturity oils coming from shallower source rocks. The biomarkers data demonstrate that most of the biomarker maturity parameters have reached their equilibrium value so they may not show any trend with temperature variation data of Tasph.
Generation Model Predicted Based on Asphaltene Kinetics
The hydrocarbon generation model based on
Behar, F., and Pelet, R., 1985, Characterization of asphaltene by pyrolysis and chromatography: Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis, v. 7, p. 121-135. Di.Primo, R., and Horsfield, B., 2000, Determining the temperature of petroleum formation from the kinetic properties from petroleum asphaltene: Nature, v. 406, p.173-176.
Dieckmann, V., Caccialanza, P.G.,
and Galimberti, R., 2001, Evaluating the timing of oil Eglinton, T.I., Larter, S.R., and Boon, J.J., 1991, Characterization of kerogens, coals, and asphaltenes by quantitative pyrolysis-mass spectrometry: Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis, v. 20, p. 25-45. Horsfield, B.,1989, Practical criteria for classifying kerogen. Some observations from pyrolysis gas chromatography: Geochimica et Cosmachimica Acta, v. 53, p. 891-901. Horsfield, B., 1997, The bulk composition of first-formed petroleum in source rocks: Springer Verlag, Heidelberg, Federal Republic of Germany, 335-402p. Kawamura, Kimitaka, and Kaplan, I.R., 1987, Dicarboxylic acids generated by thermal alteration of kerogen and humic acids: Geochemica et Cosmochimica Acta, v. 51, p. 3201-3207. Mango, F.D., 1987, An invariance in the isoheptanes of petroleum: Science, v. 237, p. 514-517. Schaefer, R.G., Schenk, H.J., Hardelauf, H., and Harms, R., 1990, Determination of gross kinetic parameters for petroleum formation from Jurassic source rocks of different maturity levels by means of laboratory experiments, in A. Durand and F. Behar, eds., Advances in organic geochemistry 1989: Organic Geochemistry, v. 16, p. 115-120. Surdan, R.C., and Stanley, K.O., 1984, Diagenesis and maturation of hydrocarbons in the Monterey formation, Pismo Syncline, California: SEPM Guidebook 2, p. 84-94. |
