Chapter 1
In order to have hydrocarbon to accumulate we need to have sediment basin, High level of organic materials, and temperature/pressure. Source Rock is sedimentary materials made of organic-rich matters. Maturity describes the degree to which petroleum generation has occurred.
Heavy, thick oil is considered immature, having been generated at relatively low temperature. Mature oil—lighter or less viscous—forms at higher temperature. Migration is the process of hydrocarbons moving out of source rock through cracks, faults, and fissures into the porous and permeable reservoir rock. Reservoir rock immobilizes the reservoir within structure called trap.
Bacterial processes deep in seabed mud convert organic matter into a waxy material called kerogen. Different periods of geological eras effect creation of kerogen; Middle Cretaceous about 100 million years ago account for 30% and late Jurassic about 150 million years ago account for 25%.
Kerogen concentrations as low as 1 % to 3 % make source rock (shake or limestone) suitable for commercial exploitation of crude oil and natural gas. Black shale is most common kind of source rock. Geothermal Gradient of earth happens as the organic-rich source rock undergoes progressive burial (i.e., as additional sediments are laid down above it), the rock becomes hotter.
From the surface to a depth of about 60 meters (200 feet), ground temperature maintains a relatively constant 11°C (55°F). The term oil window is used to describe the range of temperature or depth within which most of oil’s complex constituents are produced. This window is typically (176– 428°F) or (7,200–18,000 feet).
Maturation is the process where Kerogen in source rock undergoes conversion to petroleum due to pressure (imposed by overlying rock and sediment), the presence of heat-tolerant bacteria that act on the oil, and the presence of hydrogen and oxygen (from water and surrounding minerals). Peak kerogen to petroleum conversion occurs at about 100°C (212°F).
If the temperature rises above 130°C (266°F) for even a brief time, then crude oil itself begins to break into smaller molecules, and gas starts to be produced. Virtually all commercially viable oil reservoirs result from migration that takes the hydrocarbons away from the source rock and into reservoir rock. Notable clastic depositions are found in the Gulf Coast and several Venezuelan coastal fields, the Niger River delta in Africa, and the south Caspian Sea.
Carbonate rock is typically formed by a chemical reaction between calcium and carbonate ions in shallow seas, or by a process called biomineralization. In a promising hydrocarbon-bearing formation, oil and gas have migrated into what is called a trap. By some estimates, nearly 80% of the world’s largest oil reservoirs are found in anticlinal traps.
Hydrocarbon accumulations are typically associated with normal and thrust faults. Stratigraphic traps are created when a seal or barrier is formed above and around an oil- or gas-bearing formation by sedimentary deposition of impermeable rock. Most wells pump not only oil and gas but also mineral-laden water called brine.
By some estimates, an average of about 10% of all the gas and oil that forms in a sedimentary basin ever reaches a trap.