A review on shale gas prospect in Indian sedimentary basins

被引:0
|
作者
Sain, Kalachand [1 ]
Rai, Manish [1 ]
Sen, Mrinal K. [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIR, Natl Geophys Res Inst, Uppal Rd, Hyderabad 500007, Andhra Pradesh, India
来源
JOURNAL OF INDIAN GEOPHYSICAL UNION | 2014年 / 18卷 / 02期
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Shale gas is a natural gas trapped within shales, which are fine-grained sedimentary rocks. Hydrocarbons are generated from organic-rich shale under an optimal temperature-pressure condition due to basin subsidence. A part of the generated hydrocarbons migrates and gets trapped in conventional reservoirs that can be produced commercially by standard techniques. Shale can act as both source and reservoir rocks. Depending on the type of organic matter and maturation level, unconventional hydrocarbons could be shale oil or shale gas or a combination of both. There is a sizeable deposit of shale formations in several sedimentary basins of India with different total organic (TOC) content and maturity history. The Cambay, Krishna-Godavari, Cauvery and Damodar valley are the four major basins of shale gas reservoirs as indicated by considerable thickness of shales; sufficient TOC (2 to 6 wt%) content; and good thermal maturity with vitrinite reflectance of more than 1.0. The Vindhyan, Upper Assam, Pranhita-Godavari and Rajasthan basins are other prospective basins that need to be probed by geo-scientific methods. The gas in these shale reservoirs can occur within the natural fractures or pore spaces or as adsorbed gas on the organic matter. This is considered as the next generation major energy resource after gas hydrates and coal bed methane.
引用
收藏
页码:183 / 194
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Ten years of gas shale fracturing in China: Review and prospect
    Zhao J.
    Ren L.
    Jiang T.
    Hu D.
    Wu L.
    Wu J.
    Yin C.
    Li Y.
    Hu Y.
    Lin R.
    Li X.
    Peng Y.
    Shen C.
    Chen X.
    Yin Q.
    Jia C.
    Song Y.
    Wang H.
    Li Y.
    Wu J.
    Zeng B.
    Du L.
    Natural Gas Industry, 2021, 41 (08) : 121 - 142
  • [2] Ten years of gas shale fracturing in China: Review and prospect
    Zhao, Jinzhou
    Ren, Lan
    Jiang, Tingxue
    Hu, Dongfeng
    Wu, Leize
    Wu, Jianfa
    Yin, Congbin
    Li, Yongming
    Hu, Yongquan
    Lin, Ran
    Li, Xiaogang
    Peng, Yu
    Shen, Cheng
    Chen, Xiyu
    Yin, Qing
    Jia, Changgui
    Song, Yi
    Wang, Haitao
    Li, Zhaoyuan
    Wu, Jianjun
    Du, Linlin
    Zeng, Bin
    NATURAL GAS INDUSTRY B, 2022, 9 (02) : 158 - 175
  • [3] Review and prospect of groundwater pollution control in shale gas exploitation
    Qi, Peng
    Tang, Yuanhui
    Zhang, Chunhui
    WATER SUPPLY, 2021, 21 (08) : 4382 - 4390
  • [4] A review of noble gas geochemistry in natural gas from sedimentary basins in China
    Chen, Biying
    Liu, Yi
    Fang, Lujia
    Xu, Sheng
    Stuart, Finlay M.
    Liu, Congqiang
    JOURNAL OF ASIAN EARTH SCIENCES, 2023, 246
  • [5] A REVIEW OF ARGENTINA SEDIMENTARY BASINS
    PUCCI, JC
    OIL & GAS JOURNAL, 1987, 85 (22) : 52 - 55
  • [6] Mechanisms for lacustrine shale oil enrichment in Chinese sedimentary basins
    Guo X.
    Ma X.
    Li M.
    Qian M.
    Hu Z.
    Oil and Gas Geology, 2023, 44 (06): : 1333 - 1349
  • [7] Natural gas resources of the sedimentary basins in China
    Zhao, Wenzhi
    Wang, Zecheng
    Li, Jingming
    Li, Jian
    Xie, Zengye
    Wang, Zhaoyun
    MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, 2008, 25 (4-5) : 309 - 319
  • [8] THE STAGE OIL AND GAS DIVISION OF SEDIMENTARY BASINS
    KONISCHEV, VS
    DOKLADY AKADEMII NAUK BELARUSI, 1992, 36 (9-10): : 832 - 835
  • [9] Evaluation of Lower Paleozoic shale with shale gas prospect in south China
    Xiao, Xian-Ming
    Wang, Mao-Lin
    Wei, Qiang
    Tian, Hui
    Pan, Lei
    Li, Teng-Fei
    Natural Gas Geoscience, 2015, 26 (08) : 1433 - 1445
  • [10] Geochemistry of an unconventional gas prospect: The Barnett Shale gas model
    Hill, RJ
    Jarvie, DM
    Pollastro, RM
    Bowker, KA
    Claxton, BL
    GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2004, 68 (11) : A231 - A231