المحاضرة الاولي بترول
المحاضرة الاولي بترول
المحاضرة الاولي بترول
PETROLEUM
GEOLOGY
By
Prof. Mahmoud M. Senosy
• Course Name: Petroleum geology
• Instructor: Prof. Dr. Mahmoud M. Senosy
• Office: Geology Department – 5th floor
• Office hours: Monday (10-12 am)
• Email address: [email protected]
• Lecture: Sunday 9 – 10 Am, Geology Dept., Lab #2
• Lab: Thursday 14- 16 am, Geology Dept., 5 nd Floor, Lab # 6
• Text books:
– “Elements of Petroleum Geology ” by R.Selley, Second Edition 1998
– فاضل السعدونى.الطبعة االولى من نفس الكتاب المترجمة بواسطة د
– “Website of AAPG and other related topics
COURSE OBJECTIVE
Weight%
Paraffin 25%
Naphtene 50 %
Aromatic 17 %
Asphaltic 8%
Historical Perspectives 1859 “Drakes Well” Titusville,
Pennsylvania
1. By 2100
2. By 2050
3. By 2010 34%
4. Never
7%
3%
r
00
50
10
ve
21
20
20
Ne
By
By
By
THE MAGIC OF PETROLEUM
OUTLINE
1 barrel = 42 gallons of
crude oil
83% becomes fuel
▪ Gasoline, diesel, jet fuel,
heating oil, and liquefied
petroleum gas (propane and
butane)
17% other
▪ Solvents, fertilizers, * These add up to 44.6 gallons
pesticides, plastics because volume is increased during
the refining process.
World consumes
83,607,000 b/d (2005)
25
ESTIMATED WORLDWIDE COAL RESERVES
Country Amount Percentage
(109 tonne) of Total
United States 250* 25
Russia 230† 23
Europe 138 14
China 115 12
Australia 82 8.3
Africa 55 5.6
South America 22 2.2
North America 7.7 0.8
Total 984 100
*1st edition of book had U.S. at 1500 billion tons. What happened to all that coal?
†1st edition of book had Russian coal at 4300 billion tons. Gross overestimates?
26
Use of Coal
• 93% of the coal used in the world makes steam for
electricity generation
• 7% is used for industry (largely steel production)
• 0.1% used on Halloween for trick-or-treaters
• Usage profile has changed a lot in last ~60 years
UCSD Physics 12
Shale Oil
• Possibly 600–2000 billion barrels of oil in U.S. shale
deposits
– compare to total U.S. oil supply of 230 billion bbl
• Economically viable portion may only be 80 billion bbl
• 8 times less energy density than coal
– lots of waste rock: large-scale disposal problem
• Maximum rate of extraction may be only 5% of our current
rate of oil consumption
– limited by water availability: requires 3 as much water as oil
– contaminated process water is an issue
Spring 2013 28
UCSD Physics 12
Tar Sands
• Sand impregnated with viscous tar-like sludge
• Huge deposit in Alberta, Canada
– 300 billion bbl possibly economically recoverable
– update: 2007 estimate from Alberta Energy at 133 Gbbl
• It takes two tons of sands to create one barrel of oil
– energy density similar to that of shale oil
• In 2003, 1 million bbl/day produced
– grand hopes for 3 Mbbl/day; or 4% of world oil production
– current rate is up to 1.3 Mbbl/day
• Production cost is about $30 per barrel, so economically
competitive
Spring 2013 29
2007 US IMPORTS BY COUNTRY
Rank Country Mb/d
1 Canada 2.5
2 Mexico 1.5
4 Venezuela 1.4
5 Nigeria 1.1
6 Algeria 0.67
7 Iraq 0.48
8 Angola 0.51
9 Russia 0.41
Non-OPEC 8.1
86.0
84.6 84.6 84.9
85.0 84.5 84.3
83.7
84.0
Millions of Barrels of oil
83.1
83.0
82.3
82.0
79.0
78.0
77.0
76.0
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Year
W E
Play-chance.shp
0.4 - 0.6
0.6 - 0.8
0.8 - 1
Mapping out the chance of a seal
occurring
N
W E
Play-chance.shp
0.1 - 0.4
0.4 - 0.7
0.7 - 1
Elemental composition
of crude oil by weight%
Hydrocarbon Compounds in Petroleum:
Elements Processes
Source Rock Generation
Migration Route Preservation
Reservoir Rock Migration
Seal Rock Accumulation
Trap
60
Cross Section Of A Petroleum System
(Foreland Basin Example)
Geographic Extent of Petroleum System
Extent of Play
Extent of Prospect/Field
O
O O
Stratigraphic
Extent of
Petroleum
Overburden Rock
System
Sedimentary
Essential
Basin Fill
Elements Seal Rock
of Reservoir Rock
Petroleum
Pod of Active System Source Rock
Source Rock
Underburden Rock
Petroleum Reservoir (O)
Basement Rock
Fold-and-Thrust Belt Top Oil Window
(arrows indicate relative fault motion)
Top Gas Window
Gas
Cap
Oil
Accumulation
Entrapment Water Seal Rock
Reservoir
Rock
Migration
120° F
350° F
Generation
24803
Source 63
Rock
SEDIMENTARY BASIN
❖ Sedimentary basin are large subsiding depressions
filled with thick sequence of sedimentary rocks. These
depressions result from the compression or extension of
tectonic plates of the earth.
❖ There are around 600 sedimentary basins in the world,
only 40% are producing.
❖ Petroleum is found in the sedimentary basins.
❖ The floor of the basin is made up impermeable rocks, my
❖ Sedimentary or igneous and metamorphic rocks which
is often called “basement complex”
64
SEDIMENTARY ROCK
Sedimentary rocks are composed of sediments. That is,
particles such as grains that are formed by the
breakdown of the preexisting rocks. Or sea shell
fragment Or salts precipitated from ocean water.
The most common organic sedimentary rock is black
shale..
Sedimentary rocks are of two type
1. Those which have formed by deposition of granular
material brought from land to depositional basin
called Clastic Rocks.
2. Those which form because of precipitation of salts
from oversaturated saline sea water called Non-
Clastic or chemical rocks.
65
SOURCE ROCK
The source rocks are mainly organic rich
shale, which are very fine grained and
impermeable . These are microscopic
marine algae, which live in the upper
layers of the ocean and on death, sink in
countless millions to the sea floor. There
the algae become the part of the sediment
and form organic rich marine shale. These
shale have the potential to generate
petroleum and are termed as Source Rock.
66
MATURATION
✓ Type II is the main source of Crude oil(temp maximum 60˚C depth7000 feet)
✓ Type III gives rises to natural gas (temp maximum 150˚C depth 18000 feet)
67
MIGRATION
Migration is the process of the oil and gas moving away
from the source rock.
70
POROSITY VALUES FOR AN OIL RESERVOIR
0-5% Insignificant
5-10% Poor
10-15 Fair
15-20 Good
20-25 Excellent
1-10md poor
10-100md Good
100-1000md Excellent
71
TRAP Anticline trap
Hydrocarbons within the reservoir rock move towards a
high point(trap) in the reservoir to accumulate in a
pool. It is configuration of rocks suitable for
containing hydrocarbons and sealed by a relatively
impermeable formation through which hydrocarbons
will not migrate.
TYPES OF TRAPS
There are three basic types of traps