Organic-inorganic reactions during progressive burial: key to porosity and permeability enhancement and preservation

Abstract
The development of porosity and permeability enhancement and preservation or both in many sandstones is a function of aluminosilicate or carbonate mineral stability. The dissolution of aluminosilicate minerals and subsequent porosity and permeability enhancement is a problem of aluminium mobility. Our experimental data demonstrate that it is possible to increase the mobility of aluminium significantly and to transport it as an organic complex in organic acid solutions. These organic acids, primarily carboxylic and phenolic acids, also have the ability to dissolve carbonate grains and cements. W. W. Carothers & Y. K. Kharaka ( G. cosmochim. Acta 44, 323—332 (1980)) have shown that concentrations of carboxylic acid anions range up to 5000/10 6 (by mass) over a temperature range of 80-100 °C in some oil-field formation waters. Our experiments show that acetic acid solutions at the same concentration and over the same temperature range can increase the solubility of aluminium by one order of magnitude, whereas oxalic acid solutions increase the solubility by three orders of magnitude. Phenols such as hydroquinone and catechol are almost as effective as oxalate. The textural relations observed in the experiments are identical to those in sandstones containing porosity enhancement as a result of aluminosilicate dissolution. A natural consequence of the burial of sedimentary prisms is the maturation of organic material. Nuclear magnetic resonance (n.m.r.) studies have shown that carbonyl and phenol groups are removed from the kerogen molecule before the generation of hydrocarbons. Thermal degradation or the action of mineral oxidants, or both (the reduction of Fe 3+ released from clay diagenesis and the reduction of polysulphides are two examples) may be the mechanisms by which the peripheral groups containing the phenols and carboxylic acids are released from the kerogen molecule. The experiments suggest that the enhancement of porosity in a sandstone as the result of aluminosilicate or carbonate dissolution is the natural consequence of the interaction of organic and inorganic reactions during progressive diagenesis. Because of the time and temperature dependence of these reactions, the actual reaction sequences will be sensitive to the thermal and stratigraphic history of the source reservoir sediments.