用于水力压裂的淡水中的微生物群落无法承受压裂页岩的高温高压特性。

Sophie L Nixon, Alvaro M Plominsky, Natali Hernandez-Becerra, Christopher Boothman, Douglas H Bartlett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

通过水力压裂从页岩地层中开采天然气,这一过程会在地下深处形成微生物生态系统。裂缝页岩中出现的微生物群落包括已知的降解压裂液添加剂并导致油井基础设施腐蚀的微生物。为了限制这些负面的微生物过程,必须限制负责微生物的来源。之前的研究已经确定了一些潜在的来源,包括压裂液和钻井泥浆,但这些来源在很大程度上仍未经测试。本研究采用高压实验方法,评估淡水储层水合成压裂液中的微生物群落是否能够承受水力压裂的温度和压力条件以及裂缝页岩环境。通过细胞计数,DNA提取和培养,我们表明该群落可以单独承受高压或高温,但两者结合是致命的。这些结果表明,最初的淡水基压裂液不太可能是裂缝页岩中微生物的来源。这些发现表明,潜在的问题谱系,如已发现在裂缝页岩微生物群落中占主导地位的嗜硫菌菌株,可能来自井下环境的其他输入源,如钻井泥浆。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Microbial communities in freshwater used for hydraulic fracturing are unable to withstand the high temperatures and pressures characteristic of fractured shales.

Microbial communities in freshwater used for hydraulic fracturing are unable to withstand the high temperatures and pressures characteristic of fractured shales.

Microbial communities in freshwater used for hydraulic fracturing are unable to withstand the high temperatures and pressures characteristic of fractured shales.

Microbial communities in freshwater used for hydraulic fracturing are unable to withstand the high temperatures and pressures characteristic of fractured shales.

Natural gas is recovered from shale formations by hydraulic fracturing, a process known to create microbial ecosystems in the deep subsurface. Microbial communities that emerge in fractured shales include organisms known to degrade fracturing fluid additives and contribute to corrosion of well infrastructure. In order to limit these negative microbial processes, it is essential to constrain the source of the responsible micro-organisms. Previous studies have identified a number of potential sources, including fracturing fluids and drilling muds, yet these sources remain largely untested. Here, we apply high-pressure experimental approaches to assess whether the microbial community in synthetic fracturing fluid made from freshwater reservoir water can withstand the temperature and pressure conditions of hydraulic fracturing and the fractured shale environment. Using cell enumerations, DNA extraction and culturing, we show that the community can withstand high pressure or high temperature alone, but the combination of both is fatal. These results suggest that initial freshwater-based fracturing fluids are an unlikely source of micro-organisms in fractured shales. These findings indicate that potentially problematic lineages, such as sulfidogenic strains of Halanaerobium that have been found to dominate fractured shale microbial communities, likely derive from other input sources into the downwell environment, such as drilling muds.

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