Raj Patel , Yuwei Zhang , Chia-Wei Lin , Jose Guerrero , Youjun Deng , George M. Pharr , Kelvin Y. Xie
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引用次数: 4
Abstract
Shale rocks have become an indispensable natural gas and oil source. Hence, the knowledge of the mechanical properties of shales is critical for field applications. In this work, we selected three types of shales (argillaceous, kerogen-rich, and bituminous) and conducted detailed chemical and microstructural characterization along with mechanical property measurements by nanoindentation. The three shale samples have highly distinct mineral compositions. The argillaceous and kerogen-rich shales have soft matrix phases - muscovite and kerogen, respectively. The bituminous shale, on the contrary, has no distinct matrix phase and is rich in carbonates. Young's modulus and hardness were observed to be predominantly affected by the mineral composition. The kerogen-rich shale has the lowest Young's modulus and hardness, followed by the argillaceous shale, while the bituminous shale is the stiffest and hardest. Young's modulus is anisotropic for all shales, but hardness does not follow this trend. The three shale samples also show varied fracture behavior. Apparent cracking and spallation were noted in the argillaceous and bituminous shale, but not in the kerogen-rich shale. Cracks, when activated, tend to propagate along the bedding plane-parallel direction, regardless of the loading direction. We anticipate the new information and knowledge generated from this work has a significant contribution to applications such as drilling and hydraulic fracturing.
期刊介绍:
The objective of the Journal of Natural Gas Science & Engineering is to bridge the gap between the engineering and the science of natural gas by publishing explicitly written articles intelligible to scientists and engineers working in any field of natural gas science and engineering from the reservoir to the market.
An attempt is made in all issues to balance the subject matter and to appeal to a broad readership. The Journal of Natural Gas Science & Engineering covers the fields of natural gas exploration, production, processing and transmission in its broadest possible sense. Topics include: origin and accumulation of natural gas; natural gas geochemistry; gas-reservoir engineering; well logging, testing and evaluation; mathematical modelling; enhanced gas recovery; thermodynamics and phase behaviour, gas-reservoir modelling and simulation; natural gas production engineering; primary and enhanced production from unconventional gas resources, subsurface issues related to coalbed methane, tight gas, shale gas, and hydrate production, formation evaluation; exploration methods, multiphase flow and flow assurance issues, novel processing (e.g., subsea) techniques, raw gas transmission methods, gas processing/LNG technologies, sales gas transmission and storage. The Journal of Natural Gas Science & Engineering will also focus on economical, environmental, management and safety issues related to natural gas production, processing and transportation.