Petrographic, mineralogical, morphological and organic constraints of the Permian shaly-coal in the Tuli Basin of Limpopo-Area Karoo-Aged basin, South Africa: Implication for potential gas generation

The transition to a low-carbon energy source from coal has become imperative to mitigating the escalating climate change crisis. This study aims to investigate the organic-rich shale core samples of the Limpopo-Area Karoo Basin, retrieved from the borehole at depth 480–580 m. These samples were subj...

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Main Authors: George Oluwole Akintola, Francis Amponsah-Dacosta, Steven Rupprecht, Sphiwe Emmanuel Mhlongo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-03-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844023016535
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author George Oluwole Akintola
Francis Amponsah-Dacosta
Steven Rupprecht
Sphiwe Emmanuel Mhlongo
author_facet George Oluwole Akintola
Francis Amponsah-Dacosta
Steven Rupprecht
Sphiwe Emmanuel Mhlongo
author_sort George Oluwole Akintola
collection DOAJ
description The transition to a low-carbon energy source from coal has become imperative to mitigating the escalating climate change crisis. This study aims to investigate the organic-rich shale core samples of the Limpopo-Area Karoo Basin, retrieved from the borehole at depth 480–580 m. These samples were subjected to petrographic, mineralogical, morphological, and kerogen-type analysis to investigate potentials for shale gas generation. The petrographic analysis reveals maceral group mainly comprised of vitrinite group with some liptinite and inertinite and mineral compositions. The preponderance of pyrite framboids (1.6–12%) indicate redox of FeS2 as a precursor to methane gas generation in anoxic condition. The x-ray diffractometer (XRD) reveals the presence of quartz, albite, microcline, dolomite, pyrite and clay minerals which alluded to the mineral composition indicated by the petrographic analysis. The clay mineral component consists of montmorillonite, illite, chlorite, and mixed layered illite/smectite (I/S) in the Madzaringwe samples. The representative scanning electron microscopy-Energy Dispersive X-ray (SEM-EDX) images of the studied shales depict a combination of organic-matter, groundmass mineral, micro-fracture pore structures reflecting polyframboidal pyrite and carbonate dissolution morphology. The total organic carbon (TOC) contents averaging at 47 wt%, indicating an excellent source rock. The Rock-Eval 6 programmed pyrolysis samples showed S2 value (15.25–16.47 mg HC/g rock) with an average of 15.69 mg HC/g rock and Hydrogen index (HI) (34.0–37.0 mg HC/g TOC) indicating a Type-III Kerogen dominance prone to gas generation. The shale showed Tmax values (464–470 °C) averaging at 467.2 °C, yielding a thermally mature condensate wet-gas. This study reveals that the Permian carbonaceous rock tends to generate gas which can be hosted mainly by the organic matter pore structures, inorganic and micro-fracture pore structures.
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spelling doaj.art-34adf600f7fc415a966a5262678d60132023-04-05T08:25:34ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402023-03-0193e14446Petrographic, mineralogical, morphological and organic constraints of the Permian shaly-coal in the Tuli Basin of Limpopo-Area Karoo-Aged basin, South Africa: Implication for potential gas generationGeorge Oluwole Akintola0Francis Amponsah-Dacosta1Steven Rupprecht2Sphiwe Emmanuel Mhlongo3Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Science, Engineering and Agriculture, University of Venda, Private Bag X5050 Thohoyandou 0950 Limpopo Province South Africa; Corresponding author.Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Science, Engineering and Agriculture, University of Venda, Private Bag X5050 Thohoyandou 0950 Limpopo Province South AfricaDepartment of Mining Engineering, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg 2006, South AfricaDepartment of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Science, Engineering and Agriculture, University of Venda, Private Bag X5050 Thohoyandou 0950 Limpopo Province South AfricaThe transition to a low-carbon energy source from coal has become imperative to mitigating the escalating climate change crisis. This study aims to investigate the organic-rich shale core samples of the Limpopo-Area Karoo Basin, retrieved from the borehole at depth 480–580 m. These samples were subjected to petrographic, mineralogical, morphological, and kerogen-type analysis to investigate potentials for shale gas generation. The petrographic analysis reveals maceral group mainly comprised of vitrinite group with some liptinite and inertinite and mineral compositions. The preponderance of pyrite framboids (1.6–12%) indicate redox of FeS2 as a precursor to methane gas generation in anoxic condition. The x-ray diffractometer (XRD) reveals the presence of quartz, albite, microcline, dolomite, pyrite and clay minerals which alluded to the mineral composition indicated by the petrographic analysis. The clay mineral component consists of montmorillonite, illite, chlorite, and mixed layered illite/smectite (I/S) in the Madzaringwe samples. The representative scanning electron microscopy-Energy Dispersive X-ray (SEM-EDX) images of the studied shales depict a combination of organic-matter, groundmass mineral, micro-fracture pore structures reflecting polyframboidal pyrite and carbonate dissolution morphology. The total organic carbon (TOC) contents averaging at 47 wt%, indicating an excellent source rock. The Rock-Eval 6 programmed pyrolysis samples showed S2 value (15.25–16.47 mg HC/g rock) with an average of 15.69 mg HC/g rock and Hydrogen index (HI) (34.0–37.0 mg HC/g TOC) indicating a Type-III Kerogen dominance prone to gas generation. The shale showed Tmax values (464–470 °C) averaging at 467.2 °C, yielding a thermally mature condensate wet-gas. This study reveals that the Permian carbonaceous rock tends to generate gas which can be hosted mainly by the organic matter pore structures, inorganic and micro-fracture pore structures.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844023016535Shale gas potentialCondensate gasKerogenBack-bulgeMadzaringwe shale
spellingShingle George Oluwole Akintola
Francis Amponsah-Dacosta
Steven Rupprecht
Sphiwe Emmanuel Mhlongo
Petrographic, mineralogical, morphological and organic constraints of the Permian shaly-coal in the Tuli Basin of Limpopo-Area Karoo-Aged basin, South Africa: Implication for potential gas generation
Heliyon
Shale gas potential
Condensate gas
Kerogen
Back-bulge
Madzaringwe shale
title Petrographic, mineralogical, morphological and organic constraints of the Permian shaly-coal in the Tuli Basin of Limpopo-Area Karoo-Aged basin, South Africa: Implication for potential gas generation
title_full Petrographic, mineralogical, morphological and organic constraints of the Permian shaly-coal in the Tuli Basin of Limpopo-Area Karoo-Aged basin, South Africa: Implication for potential gas generation
title_fullStr Petrographic, mineralogical, morphological and organic constraints of the Permian shaly-coal in the Tuli Basin of Limpopo-Area Karoo-Aged basin, South Africa: Implication for potential gas generation
title_full_unstemmed Petrographic, mineralogical, morphological and organic constraints of the Permian shaly-coal in the Tuli Basin of Limpopo-Area Karoo-Aged basin, South Africa: Implication for potential gas generation
title_short Petrographic, mineralogical, morphological and organic constraints of the Permian shaly-coal in the Tuli Basin of Limpopo-Area Karoo-Aged basin, South Africa: Implication for potential gas generation
title_sort petrographic mineralogical morphological and organic constraints of the permian shaly coal in the tuli basin of limpopo area karoo aged basin south africa implication for potential gas generation
topic Shale gas potential
Condensate gas
Kerogen
Back-bulge
Madzaringwe shale
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844023016535
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