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Stable isotope systematics of coalbed methane

Posted on:2007-12-07Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Victoria (Canada)Candidate:Niemann, MartinFull Text:PDF
GTID:1450390005482623Subject:Biogeochemistry
Abstract/Summary:
Coalbed methane (CBM) is a growing resource for "clean" natural gas and is becoming of great interest for academic research. Despite much research already be done, geochemical investigations, especially with focus on the stable carbon and hydrogen isotope composition of CBM, are rare.;The geochemical analyzes were carried out using GC-IRMS. Analyzes include gas composition (methane, ethane, propane, n-butane, i-butane and carbon dioxide) and the proportions of the different gas species, as well as stable carbon isotope ratios for all gas species and stable hydrogen isotope ratios for methane.;The analyzed averaged and normalized gas composition of the considered samples reveals average proportions for methane between 44.3% and 98.7%, for ethane between 0% and 9.98%, for propane between 0% and 1.15%, for n-butane between 0% and 1.09%, for i-butane between 0% and 0.003% and for carbon dioxide between 1.34% and 53.9%. The gas composition does not show conclusive trends with increasing production/desorption time. Methane stable carbon isotope ratios vary with production/desorption time. Samples from production scenarios show a general depletion in 13C for methane with increasing production time and isotope shifts between -1.6% and -35.8‰. Samples from desorption experiment scenarios show mostly enrichment in 13C for methane with increasing desorption time and isotope shifts of up to -43.4‰, but also 12C enrichment was observed in some sample sets with isotope shifts of up to +32.1‰. Overall, the magnitudes of the observed isotope shifts vary considerably between different sample sets, but also within samples from the same source. (Abstract shortened by UMI.);For this study, over 1,000 CBM samples were analyzed. The samples were collected during 10 different sample campaigns from seven different coal bearing basins worldwide. Seven sample sets were collected during desorption experiments following drilling of exploration wells and three sample sets were collected from CBM producing wells. The considered coals range in maturity from sub bituminous A (min. 0.57%RO) to anthracite (max. 4.55%RO), cover a wide range of different maceral compositions and were accessed in depths between 10m and 1312m beneath surface. Samples cover a production time of up to 6312 hours and a desorption time of up to 2773 hours.
Keywords/Search Tags:Methane, Isotope, CBM, Stable, Samples, Time, Gas, Desorption
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