TY - JOUR
T1 - Source rock evaluation of Middle Jurassic coals, northeast Greenland, by artificial maturation: aspects of petroleum generation from coal
AU - Petersen, Henrik I.
AU - Bojesen-Koefoed, Jørgen A.
AU - Nytoft, Hans P.
PY - 2002/2/1
Y1 - 2002/2/1
N2 - Paralic liptinite-enriched coals and carbonaceous mudstones in northeast Greenland constitute potential highly oil-prone source rocks, whereas the humic coals may be marginal source rocks. The liptinite-rich coals are dominated by resinite or flourescing amorphous organic matter and alginite, resulting in hydrogen index (HI) values generally above 300 and reaching up to 728. During artificial maturation up to 330°C/72 hr, the coals follow the maturation paths of kerogen types I and II on an HI vs. Tmax diagram, and calculations show that upon passage through the oil window, roughly 85% of their generation potential is realized. Activation energy (Ea) distributions with prominent principal Ea values centered around 60-62 kcal/mole and frequency factors from 5.855 × 1015 s-1 to 3.249 × 1016 s-1 strongly influence the generation characteristics from 300 to 330°C/72 hr artificial maturation. Important changes include marked loss of liptinite flourescence and increase in resinite reflectance; small change in T max; significant decrease in HI; pronounced increase in extract yields; increased generation of saturates; and generation of labile bitumen with low Ea values. These observations indicate significant bitumen/petroleum formation from the coals during a relatively narrow temperature range, which, together with the petrographic composition, may facilitate expulsion of a waxy crude oil. The coals demonstrate that under certain depositional conditions, highly prolific coal source rocks can form with the capacity not only to generate but also to expel liquid petroleum.
AB - Paralic liptinite-enriched coals and carbonaceous mudstones in northeast Greenland constitute potential highly oil-prone source rocks, whereas the humic coals may be marginal source rocks. The liptinite-rich coals are dominated by resinite or flourescing amorphous organic matter and alginite, resulting in hydrogen index (HI) values generally above 300 and reaching up to 728. During artificial maturation up to 330°C/72 hr, the coals follow the maturation paths of kerogen types I and II on an HI vs. Tmax diagram, and calculations show that upon passage through the oil window, roughly 85% of their generation potential is realized. Activation energy (Ea) distributions with prominent principal Ea values centered around 60-62 kcal/mole and frequency factors from 5.855 × 1015 s-1 to 3.249 × 1016 s-1 strongly influence the generation characteristics from 300 to 330°C/72 hr artificial maturation. Important changes include marked loss of liptinite flourescence and increase in resinite reflectance; small change in T max; significant decrease in HI; pronounced increase in extract yields; increased generation of saturates; and generation of labile bitumen with low Ea values. These observations indicate significant bitumen/petroleum formation from the coals during a relatively narrow temperature range, which, together with the petrographic composition, may facilitate expulsion of a waxy crude oil. The coals demonstrate that under certain depositional conditions, highly prolific coal source rocks can form with the capacity not only to generate but also to expel liquid petroleum.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0036472755&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1306/61EEDA9E-173E-11D7-8645000102C1865D
DO - 10.1306/61EEDA9E-173E-11D7-8645000102C1865D
M3 - Article
SN - 0149-1423
VL - 86
SP - 233
EP - 256
JO - AAPG Bulletin
JF - AAPG Bulletin
IS - 2
ER -