Study of factors affecting shale gas adsorption by simplified local density-Peng–Robinson method:

2017 
Shale gas has become an important source of natural gas, and a significant portion of gas in the reservoir exists in an adsorbed state. Thus, knowledge of gas adsorption behavior is important to estimate original gas in place and shale gas production. In this paper, shale gas adsorption affecting factors which include temperature, pressure, pore type, and diameters were studied quantitatively and systematically using simplified local density model. It was found that the main affecting factors were temperature, pore type, diameter, and pressure; type I kerogen has the lowest and type III kerogen has the largest excess adsorption gas capacity; due to the interaction energy between gas molecules and pore wall molecules, gas has the highest local density near the pore wall and the lowest density in the middle of the pore under a certain pressure and temperature; the increment of gas density as temperature decreases near the pore wall is significant, but the bulk methane gas density shows a very small change d...
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