Shale: Devanarayanan EM I.Msc Applied Geology
Shale: Devanarayanan EM I.Msc Applied Geology
Shale: Devanarayanan EM I.Msc Applied Geology
Devanarayanan EM
I.Msc Applied Geology
MINERAL COMPOSITION
Shales, also known as mud rock or clay rock, are very fine-grained
sedimentary rocks with a particle size less than 0.06 mm. This rock deposits
in terrestrial as well as marine environments.Shale is composed of quartz
and feldspar and major minerals with many accessory minerals. The major
minerals in shale are kaolinite, illite, and semectite. Other minor
constituents are organic carbon, carbonate minerals, iron oxide minerals,
sulfide minerals, and heavy minerals.Shale is distinguished from other
mudstones because it is fissile and laminated.
Shales may be classified as quartzose, feldspathic or micaceous shale
depending on the predominance of the minerals quartz, feldspar or mica,
respectively, in the rock after appropriate XRD analysis
Texture
Shales characteristically contain fine-grained silt and clay particles (<
0.063mm). They are therefore classified as silty shale or clay shale,
depending on whether silts or clays dominate in the constituents of the
rock. Silty shale and clay shale may collectively be called argillaceous shales.
Occasionally, shales may also contain appreciable amounts of sands, in
which case they may be called sandy shale or arenaceous shale.
Elemental Distribution
Silicon, aluminum, titanium, zirconium, and gallium generally are the
principal elements in the detrital mineral fraction of these rocks.
Locally, boron, beryllium, scandium, and vanadium are also in the
detrital fraction. Calcium, magnesium, and manganese are associated
chiefly with the carbonate-mineral fraction, where present. Different
groups of elements are associated with the organic-matter fraction of
these rocks in the different sets of samples.
Physical properties
Presence of shale in a reservoir:
●mineral composition,
●texture (layout and distribution of grains, the degree in which they fill the
rock spaces),
●structure (grain size and shape),pore space characteristics (size, type and
interconnections of empty voids and micr-fractures).
Shale rocks are frequently very heterogenous at a small scale.
Illite - also includes glauconite (a green clay sand) and are the commonest clay
minerals; formed by the decomposition of some micas and feldspars;
predominant in marine clays and shales
The inner hydroxyl points towards the ditrigonal cavity of the siloxane layer. The
inner surface hydroxyls point away from the surface and hydrogen bond to the
next adjacent siloxane surface.
Illite
(1⁄2Ca,Na)(Al,Mg,Fe)4(Si,Al)8O20(OH)4.nH2O
Smectite group includes dioctahedral aluminum micas of montmorillonite–
beidellite and nontronite series or Fe–smectite belonging to clay minerals.
Smectite crystallizes in monoclinic system in the form of small sheets (<1 μm)
and can be explored only by the electron microscope and X-ray powder
diffraction and chemical analysis with the help of electronic microsonde.
Uses
Shales are commercially important, having many applications in the ceramics
industry in particular. They are a valuable raw material for tile, brick, and pottery
and constitute a major source of alumina for Portland cement. In addition, advances
in recovery methods may one day make oil shale a practical source for liquid
petroleum.
Montmorillonite clay is used in some natural pet foods for a very specific purpose.
Pet food manufacturers add anti-caking agents to their formulas, to adsorb excess
moisture and help keep the food from clumping.
Kaolinite, also called china clay, soft white clay that is an essential ingredient in the
manufacture of china and porcelain and is widely used in the making of paper,
rubber, paint, and many other products.
The crystallinity of illite has been used as an indicator of metamorphic grade in
clay-bearing rocks metamorphosed under conditions between diagenesis and low-
grade metamorphism. With increasing temperature, illite is thought to undergo a
transformation into muscovite.
Oil shales
Oil shale is an organic-rich fine-
grained sedimentary rock containing
kerogen from which liquid
hydrocarbons can be produced,
called shale oil.
Shale oil is similar to petroleum, and
can be refined into many different
substances, including diesel fuel,
gasoline, and liquid petroleum gas
(LPG). Companies can also refine shale
oil to produce other commercial
products, such as ammonia and sulfur.
References
● Helmenstine, Anne Marie, Ph.D. (2018, October 22). Shale Rock: Geology,
Composition, Uses. Retrieved from
https://www.thoughtco.com/shale-rock-4165848