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School of Engineering
Principle of petroleum engineering
PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
LECTURE 2
Nazir Mafakheri
Lecture 2
What is petroleum
Petroleum is a mixture of naturally occurring hydrocarbons which
may exist in the solid, liquid, or gaseous states, depending upon the
conditions of pressure and temperature to which it is subjected.
• Traces of Oxygen, Sulfur, Nitrogen, and Helium may be found as impurities in crude
petroleum.
• Although all petroleum is constituted primarily of carbon and hydrogen, the molecular
constitution of crude oils differs widely.
What is petroleum
Chemistry of Petroleum
• Hydrocarbons:
In organic chemistry, a hydrocarbon is an organic
compound consisting entirely of hydrogen and carbon
atoms.
The classifications for hydrocarbons:
1) Saturated hydrocarbons (alkanes)
2) Unsaturated hydrocarbons
3) Cycloalkanes
4) Aromatic hydrocarbons
The simplest
hydrocarbon is
Methane (CH4)
Chemistry of Petroleum
• 1)Saturated hydrocarbons (alkanes):
Saturated hydrocarbons (alkanes) are the simplest of the hydrocarbon species and are
composed entirely of single bonds and are saturated with hydrogen.
A) alkenes:
B) alkynes
Those containing triple bonds are called alkynes, with general formula
Chemistry of Petroleum
3) Cycloalkanes
Cycloalkanes are hydrocarbons containing one or more carbon rings to which hydrogen
atoms are attached.
The general formula for a saturated hydrocarbon containing one ring is:
Chemistry of Petroleum
3) Cycloalkanes
Benzene:
Benzene, C6H6, is the simplest aromatic hydrocarbon and was recognized as the first
aromatic hydrocarbon
Chemistry of Petroleum
4) Aromatic hydrocarbons:
Resins and asphaltenes are large molecules, primarily hydrogen and carbon,
with one to three sulfur, oxygen, or nitrogen atoms per molecule.
The basic structure is composed of rings, primarily aromatic, with from three to
ten or more rings in each molecule. The non hydrocarbon atom can be a part of
the ring structure or can be located in links connecting the rings.
• Metamorphic rocks
– about 14% of all rocks
– originate from mechanical, thermal, and chemical
changes of igneous rocks
• Sedimentary Rocks
– about 66% of all rocks
– they are important to the study of petrophysics and
petroleum reservoir engineering.
Classification of Rocks
• The rocks of the earth’s crust are constantly being recycled. Magna
solidifies to form igneous rocks. If igneous rock are exposed at the
surface, they weather, and weathered rock fragments are transported
and sediment, deposited, and lithified into sedimentary rocks. If the
igneous or sedimentary rocks are subjected to temperatures and
pressures that exceed those under which they solidified, they may
undergo changes to form metamorphic rocks.
Classification of Rocks
IGNEOUS SEDIMENTARY METAMORPHIC
Rock-forming Source of
material
Recrystallization due to
Crystallization Sedimentation, burial
heat, pressure, or
(Solidification of melt) and lithification
chemically active fluids
Classification of Rocks
• Igneous
rocks are formed from molten material which is either ejected from the
earth during volcanic activity (e.g., lava flows, and ash falls), or which
crystallizes from a magma that is injected into existing rock and cools
slowly, giving rise rocks such as granites. Igneous rocks are of minor
importance for oil exploration. Rarely, hydrocarbon is produced from
fractured igneous rocks.
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Classification of Rocks
• Sedimentary
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Classification of Rocks
• Metamorphic
rocks are formed by subjecting any of the three rock types to high
temperatures and pressures, that alter the character of the existing rock.
Common examples of metamorphic rocks are marble derived from
limestone and slate derived from shale. Due to the high temperature and
pressures there is very little organic matter or hydrocarbons in
metamorphic rocks.
Classification of Rocks
• What are sediments?
• Sediment - loose, solid particles originating from:
– Weathering and erosion of pre-existing rocks
– Chemical precipitation from solution, including secretion by
organisms in water
Classification of Rocks
• The rocks of the earth’s crust are constantly being recycled. Magna
solidifies to form igneous rocks. If igneous rock are exposed at the
surface, they weather, and weathered rock fragments are transported
and sediment, deposited, and lithified into sedimentary rocks. If the
igneous or sedimentary rocks are subjected to temperatures and
pressures that exceed those under which they solidified, they may
undergo changes to form metamorphic rocks.
Classification of Rocks
The Rock Cycle
Magma
n
a
Weathering,
Transportation
Sedimentary and Deposition
Rock Sediment
i
Common Geological Environments
Marine sedimentary environment
Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks
What is a Sedimentary Rock?
Sedimentary rocks are types of rock that Sediments after they are
deposited may be buried and undergo physical and chemical change
resulting in a solid rock.
Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks
• The three most common sedimentary rocks associated with petroleum
reservoirs are:
1) sandstone
2) shale
3) limestone.
Sedimentary Rock Types
• Relative abundance Sandstone
and conglomerate
~11%
Limestone and
dolomite
~13%
Siltstone, mud
and shale
~75%
Origin of petroleum
The theories of the origin of petroleum may be classified as:
1) Organic
2) Inorganic
Origin of petroleum
Origin of petroleum:
1) Organic theories:
The organic theories assume that petroleum evolved from decomposition of
vegetable and animal organisms that lived during previous ages.
2) Inorganic theories:
The inorganic theories attempt to explain the formation of petroleum by
assuming chemical reaction among water, carbon dioxide and various
inorganic substances such as carbides and carbonates, in the earth.
Origin of petroleum
The organic theory of petroleum origin (most accepted)
Ancient seas covered much of the present land area millions of years ago
Over the years, rivers flowing down to these seas carried large volumes of mud
and sedimentary materials ( containing small plants and animals) into the sea.
The buildup of thousands of feet of mud and sediment layers over the sea floor.
The sea floors were slowly sink and squeezed to form the sedimentary rocks (the
sandstones and shales, and the carbonates)
Over many years, pressure, temperature, bacteria, and other reactions caused
these dead organisms to change into oil and gas.
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The Origin and Habitat of Petroleum
Initial Deposits of Flat
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Petroleum forms from oceanic micro-organisms
Schematic Representation of the Mechanism
of Petroleum Generation and Destruction
Organic Debris
Diagenesis
Oil Reservoir
Reservoir rock:
A subsurface body of rock having sufficient porosity and permeability to store and
transmit fluids.
A suitable reservoir rock is porous and permeable. That is , the pores interconnect
so that fluids can migrate through the rock.
Sedimentary rocks are the most common reservoir rocks because they have more
porosity than most igneous and metamorphic rocks and
Cross Section Of A Petroleum System
Stratigraphic
Extent of
Petroleum
Overburden Rock
System Essential
Sedimentary
Seal Rock
Basin Fill
Elements
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
(modified from Magoon and Dow, 1994)
The Origin and Habitat of Petroleum
Migration of petroleum :
The movement of hydrocarbons from their source into reservoir rocks.
1) Primary migration
2) Secondary migration
The Origin and Habitat of Petroleum
1) Primary migration:
The movement of newly generated hydrocarbons out of their source rock is
primary migration, also called expulsion.
2) Secondary migration:
The further movement of the hydrocarbons into reservoir rock in a hydrocarbon
trap or other area of accumulation is secondary migration.
The Origin and Habitat of Petroleum
The Origin and Habitat of Petroleum
Traps
If nothing stops oil from rising, it
will reach surface.
A natural barrier, or trap, must exist
for a petroleum accumulation to
form.
Trap:
A configuration of geologic features where oil
and gas (petroleum) can be barred from further
movement.
Traps As oil and gas are lighter than the ground water which permeates the porous rocks
below the water table, it is evident that the upward movement of petroleum must be
restricted in order that accumulations exist at depth
Traps The closure of the trap is the distance between the crest and the spill
point (lowest point of the trap that can contain hydrocarbons).
Traps Classification of Hydrocarbon Traps
1) Structural traps : Structural traps are traps that are formed because of a
deformation in the rock layer that contains the hydrocarbons.
b) Fault traps: A fault trap occurs when the formations on either side of the
fault have been moved into a position that prevents further migration of
petroleum.
c) diapiric traps: produced by intrusion of salt or mud diapirs
Oil/Wate
r
Contact Oil
Fracture Basement
Fold Trap
Salt Salt
Diapir Oil
Dome
Hydrocarbon Traps(anticlinal)
Gas
Oil
Sandstone
Shale
Fault Trap
Oil / Gas
Stratigraphic Hydrocarbon Traps
Unconformity Pinch out
Uncomformity Oil/Gas
Oil/Gas
Oil/Gas
Biodegraded
Oil/Asphalt
Partly
Water Biodegraded Oil
Hydrodynamic Trap
Hydrostatic
Head
Shale
Water
Oil
The Origin and Habitat of Petroleum
GENERATION, MIGRATION, AND
TRAPPING OF HYDROCARBONS
Dimension and Units
• Dimension: A dimension is the measure by which a physical variable is
expressed quantitatively.
2) secondary dimensions
• primary dimensions :
In fluid mechanics there are only four primary dimensions from
and temperature.
Systems of units have always varied widely from country to country, even
In the BG system:
or
The Kelvin temperature scale is an absolute scale and is related to the Celsius (centigrade)
scale (°C) through the relationship:
Dimension and Units
• The force unit, called the newton (N), is defined from Newton’s second law as
or
𝑀 𝑘𝑔 𝑔 𝑙𝑏𝑚
Dimensions: Units: 3 ; ;
𝐿3 𝑚 𝑐𝑚3 𝑓𝑡 3
𝜌𝑔𝑎𝑠
Specific gravity for gases 𝑆𝐺𝑔𝑎𝑠 =
𝜌𝐴𝑖𝑟
𝜌𝑙𝑖𝑞𝑢𝑖𝑑
Specific gravity for liquids 𝑆𝐺𝑙𝑖𝑞𝑢𝑖𝑑 =
𝜌𝑤𝑎𝑡𝑒𝑟
Physical properties of Hydrocarbons
Specific gravity of gases:
𝜌𝑔𝑎𝑠
𝑆𝐺𝑔𝑎𝑠 =
𝜌𝐴𝑖𝑟
𝜌𝑔𝑎𝑠
𝑆𝐺𝑔𝑎𝑠 =
𝑙𝑏
0.076 3
𝑓𝑡
Physical properties of Hydrocarbons
Specific gravity of Crude Oil:
𝜌𝑜
𝑆𝐺𝑜 =
𝜌𝑤𝑎𝑡𝑒𝑟
𝜌𝑜
The specific gravity of crude oils ranges from 𝑆𝐺𝑜 =
𝑙𝑏
about 0.75 to 1.01. 62.4
𝑓𝑡 3
Physical properties of Hydrocarbons
The American Petroleum Institute gravity, or API gravity
Although the density and specific gravity are used extensively in the petroleum
industry, the API gravity is the preferred gravity scale.
This gravity scale is precisely related to the specific gravity by the following
expression:
141.5
𝐴𝑃𝐼 𝑔𝑟𝑎𝑣𝑖𝑡𝑦 = − 131.5
𝑆𝐺𝑜
141.5
Conversely, 𝑆𝐺𝑜 =
𝐴𝑃𝐼 𝑔𝑟𝑎𝑣𝑖𝑡𝑦 + 131.5
Physical properties of Hydrocarbons
• API gravity, is a measure of how heavy or light a petroleum liquid is compared
to water.
• Crude oil is classified as light, medium or heavy, according to its measured API
gravity.
Light crude oil is defined as having an API gravity higher than 31.1 °API (less than
870 kg/m3)
Medium oil is defined as having an API gravity between 22.3 °API and 31.1 °API (870
to 920 kg/m3)
Heavy crude oil is defined as having an API gravity below 22.3 °API (920 to
1000 kg/m3)
Extra heavy oil is defined with API gravity below 10.0 °API (greater than 1000 kg/m3)
Crude Oils
Light Crude Heavy Crude
Palo Pinto Field Humble Oil Field
North Texas Southwest Texas
Physical properties of Hydrocarbons
Viscosity:
The viscosity of a fluid is a measure of the internal fluid friction (resistance) to
flow.
If the friction between layers of the fluid is small, i.e., low viscosity, an applied
shearing force will result in a large velocity gradient.
As the viscosity increases, each fluid layer exerts a larger frictional drag on the
adjacent layers and velocity gradient decreases.