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The influence of sedimentary facies, mineralogy, and diagenesis on reservoir properties of the coal-bearing Upper Carboniferous of NW Germany

Jonas Greve, Benjamin Busch, Dennis Quandt, Mathias Knaak, Christoph Hilgers

2024Petroleum Geoscience11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Former coal mines hosted in Upper Carboniferous silt- and sandstones in the Ruhr Basin, NW Germany, are currently examined for post-mining applications (e.g. geothermal energy) and are also important tight-gas reservoir analogs. Core material from well Pelkum-1, comprising Westphalian A (Bashkirian) delta deposits, was studied. The sandstones and siltstones are generally tight (mean porosity 5.5%; mean permeability 0.26 mD). Poor reservoir properties primarily result from pronounced mechanical compaction (mean COPL 38.8%) due to deep burial and high contents of ductile rock fragments. Better reservoir properties in sandstones (>8%; >0.01 mD) are due to (1) lower volumes of ductile grains (<38%) that deform during mechanical compaction and (2) higher volumes in feldspar and unstable rock fragments. During burial these form secondary porosity (>1.5%) resulting from acidic pore water from organic matter maturation. Still, sandstones with enhanced porosities only show a small increase in permeability since authigenic clays (i.e. kaolinite and illite) or late diagenetic carbonates (i.e. siderite and ferroan dolomite/ankerite) clog secondary porosity. Quartz cementation has a minor impact on reservoir properties. Evaluating the Si/Al ratio can be a suitable proxy to assess grain sizes and may be a convenient tool for further exploration. Supplementary material: Lithologs and petrophysical data of well Pelkum-1 are available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.7003156

Topics & Concepts

GeologyAnkeriteDiagenesisAuthigenicSideriteIlliteDolomiteSedimentary rockGeochemistryClastic rockCarboniferousPetrophysicsCompactionCementation (geology)MineralogyPetrologyClay mineralsPorosityCalciteGeomorphologyGeotechnical engineeringStructural basinCementHistoryArchaeologyHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysisGeological formations and processesMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
The influence of sedimentary facies, mineralogy, and diagenesis on reservoir properties of the coal-bearing Upper Carboniferous of NW Germany | Litcius