Experimental Deformation of Oil Shales: Implications for Sediment Burial and Exploitation
Eseme, Emmanuel, R. Littke,
B.M. Krooss,
Compressive
deformation experiments up to 350°C have been performed on Torbanite,
Himmetoglu, Posidonia,
Condor and Messel oil shales.
Integrated geochemistry, petrology and rock mechanical techniques were used in
order to assess the responses of these oil shales to
mechanical and thermal stress. Mechanical deformation experiments reveal that
oil shales respond to stress variations with elastic
and plastic deformation in relation to organic matter content, i.e. the higher
the organic matter content the greater is the plastic deformation. This
observation was most pronounced in the Torbanite. The
unconfined strength shows that most of these oil shales
have been subjected to post burial uplift that led to over-consolidation.
Thermal deformation demonstrates the reduction in rock strength by thermal
stress; i.e. there is a significant chemical compaction due to thermal stress
that leads to much higher strain than observed at the same stress at room
temperature. Montmorillonite and possibly kaolinite respond to thermal stress by dehydration. Organic
matter conversion is still low at the maximum temperature of 350°C. In in situ exploitation, with increasing thermal stress,an even higher proportion
of the load-bearing organic matter would be converted into oil, leading to a
significant volume reduction of the oil shale and change of landscape morphology
if the oil shale used for retorting is thick. The oil shales
studied here need auto-fracturing due to overpressure build-up or artificial
fracturing to produce the generated petroleum due to the low initial permeabilities of the rock matrix.