All about Oil Shale
Oil Shale: A Green Energy Alternative
Oil Shale: A Green Energy Alternative |
Any sedimentary rock containing various amounts of solid organic material that yields petroleum products, along with a variety of solid by-products, when subjected to pyrolysis—a treatment that consists of heating the rock to above 300 °C (about 575 °F) in the absence of oxygen. The liquid oil extracted from oil shale, once it is upgraded, creates a type of synthetic crude oil that is commonly referred to as shale oil. Oil produced from oil shales has potential commercial value in some of the same markets served by conventional crude oil, as it can be refined into products ranging from diesel fuel to gasoline (petrol) to liquefied petroleum gas (LPG). Some of the solid by-products of oil shale processing are unusable wastes, but others have commercial value. These include sulfur, ammonia, alumina, soda ash, and nahcolite (a mineral form of sodium bicarbonate). In addition, spent shale has been used in the production of cement, where the carbon-rich material can enhance the energy balance of the mixture. At the same time, oil shale production has a potentially significant impact on the natural environment, including carbon emission, water consumption, groundwater contamination, and disturbance of land surfaces.
Some confusion has arisen over the terms oil shale and shale oil. Until the early 21st century, those terms respectively referred solely to the organic-rich petroleum source rock described in this article and to the liquid product obtained from this rock through pyrolysis. In the early 2000s, however, the same terms were applied also to fine-grained impermeable rocks that contain crude oil and to the oil produced from those rocks through hydraulic fracturing.
Geologic originsOil shale was formed from sediments laid down in ancient lakes, seas, and small terrestrial water bodies such as bogs and lagoons. Oil shales deposited in large lake basins, particularly those of tectonic origin, are commonly of considerable thickness in parts. Mineralogically, the deposits are composed of marlstone or argillaceous mudstone, possibly associated with volcanic tuff and evaporite mineral deposits. Major oil shale deposits of this type are the huge Green River Formation (GRF) in the western United States, dating from the Eocene Epoch; oil shales found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo that were laid down in the Triassic Period; and the Albert shale in New Brunswick, Canada, of Mississippian origin.
Oil shale deposited in shallow marine environments is thinner than shale of lacustrine origin but of greater areal extent. The mineral fraction is mostly clay and silica, though carbonates also occur. Extensive deposits of black shales of this variety were formed during the Cambrian Period in northern Europe and Siberia; the Silurian Period in North America; the Permian Period in southern Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina; the Jurassic Period in western Europe; and the Miocene Epoch of the Neogene Period in Italy, Sicily, and California.
Oil shale deposited in small lakes, bogs, and lagoons is found associated with coal seams. Deposits of this type occur in a sequence found in western Europe dating from the Permian Period and in deposits of northeastern China laid down in the early Cenozoic Era.
Chemical composition
Oil shales consist of solid organic matter entrained in an inorganic mineral matrix. Chemically, the mineral content consists primarily of silicon, calcium, aluminum, magnesium, iron, sodium, and potassium found in silicate, carbonate, oxide, and sulfide minerals.
The chemical composition of the organic matter is variable. It consists mainly of complex organic molecules containing hydrogen and carbon as well as certain amounts of the heteroatomic elements oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur. The heteroatomic elements have important effects on the properties of the oil extracted from shales, frequently influencing the choice of upgrading and refining processes, and shales from different regions and different geologic origins are sometimes known for the content of those crucial elements. For instance, the kukersite oil shale of Estonia is noted for being oxygen-rich. Oil shale that originated in saline lake environments, such as the GRF shales of the western United States, tends to be nitrogen-rich, whereas marine oil shales such as those found in Morocco, Egypt, Israel, and Jordan are sulfur-rich.
Mineral content
The mineral constituents of oil shale vary according to sediment type. Some are true shale in which clay minerals are predominant, such as the Garden Gulch Member of the GRF in Utah. Others, such as the Parachute Creek Member of the GRF in Colorado, are marlstones, containing dolomite or calcite as well as silicate minerals such as clay, quartz, and feldspar.
The various oil shale deposits that have been mined around the world since the early 20th century have ranged from shale to marlstone to carbonate mudstone. All are relatively fine-grained sedimentary rocks, as deposits of coarse sediment such as sand are not compatible with the preservation of organic material. Sandstone found in the Wyoming part of the GRF, for instance, significantly reduces the organic richness of the oil shale.
In the GRF, saline minerals such as nahcolite, trona, and dawsonite, along with a host of other unusual minerals, were most likely formed under extremely saline and stratified conditions in the water of an Eocene lake. The chemical stratification would have created an oxygen-depleted, carbon dioxide-rich environment in the salty bottom layers of the lake, which would have helped to preserve the organic matter, deposit the inorganic minerals, and break down much of the clay carried in as sediment.
Organic content
The organic matter contained in oil shale is principally kerogen, a solid product of bacterially altered plant and animal remains that is not soluble in traditional petroleum solvents. Kerogen is the source of virtually all crude oil. The richest oil shale ranges from brown to black in colour. Rich oil shale has low density and is flammable, burning with a sooty flame. In addition, oil shale is quite resistant to the oxidizing effects of air. The external structure is commonly laminar; a cross section would show alternating darker and lighter layers, or varves, attributed to annual cycles of organic matter deposition and accumulation. The lamination would have resulted from sedimentation in the quiet waters of a lake or shallow sea, in which either carbonates were precipitated from solution or clay minerals and other silicate minerals were transported as extremely fine detritus.
The organic matter contained in oil shale is principally kerogen, a solid product of bacterially altered plant and animal remains that is not soluble in traditional petroleum solvents. Kerogen is the source of virtually all crude oil. The richest oil shale ranges from brown to black in colour. Rich oil shale has low density and is flammable, burning with a sooty flame. In addition, oil shale is quite resistant to the oxidizing effects of air. The external structure is commonly laminar; a cross section would show alternating darker and lighter layers, or varves, attributed to annual cycles of organic matter deposition and accumulation. The lamination would have resulted from sedimentation in the quiet waters of a lake or shallow sea, in which either carbonates were precipitated from solution or clay minerals and other silicate minerals were transported as extremely fine detritus.
Some oil shale kerogens are composed almost entirely of identifiable algal remains, whereas other types are a mixture of amorphous organic matter and only some identifiable organic remnants. The main types of algae are Botryococcus, Tasmanites, and Gloeocapsomorpha. Botryococcus is a colonial alga that lives in brackish or fresh water. Permian kerogen from France appears to consist almost exclusively of Botryococcus colonies, as does the kerogen in Carboniferous and Permian torbanites from Scotland, Australia, and South Africa and Holocene coorongites from Australia. Tasmanites is a marine alga the remains of which make up nearly all the kerogen of tasmanites in Australia (Permian) and Alaska (Jurassic-Cretaceous). The remains of Tasmanites also are present in the Lower Toarcian shales of the Paris Basin in France and the Lower Silurian shales of Algeria. Gloeocapsomorpha prisca is a marine alga that makes up the kerogen found in the kukersite oil shales of Estonia and adjacent Russia.
Oil shale in Queensland, Australia, contains kerogen derived from planktonic lacustrine algae.
Commonly, only a minor part of the kerogen in oil shale is made of recognizable organic remnants. The rest is amorphous, probably because of alteration by microbes during sedimentation. Amorphous organic material (known as sapropelic matter) is found in thick accumulations in the Permian Irati shale of Brazil and in the Eocene GRF. The organic material may have been derived from planktonic organisms (e.g., algae, copepods, and ostracods) and from microorganisms that lived in the sediment (e.g., bacteria and algae).
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