Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Noble gas tracing of groundwater/coalbed methan...
View graph of relations

Noble gas tracing of groundwater/coalbed methane interaction in the San Juan Basin, USA

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Noble gas tracing of groundwater/coalbed methane interaction in the San Juan Basin, USA. / Zhou, Zheng; Ballentine, Chris; Kipfer, Rolf et al.
In: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Vol. 69, No. 23, 01.12.2005, p. 5413-5428.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Zhou, Z, Ballentine, C, Kipfer, R, Schoell, M & Thibodeaux, S 2005, 'Noble gas tracing of groundwater/coalbed methane interaction in the San Juan Basin, USA', Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, vol. 69, no. 23, pp. 5413-5428. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2005.06.027

APA

Zhou, Z., Ballentine, C., Kipfer, R., Schoell, M., & Thibodeaux, S. (2005). Noble gas tracing of groundwater/coalbed methane interaction in the San Juan Basin, USA. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 69(23), 5413-5428. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2005.06.027

Vancouver

Zhou Z, Ballentine C, Kipfer R, Schoell M, Thibodeaux S. Noble gas tracing of groundwater/coalbed methane interaction in the San Juan Basin, USA. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 2005 Dec 1;69(23):5413-5428. doi: 10.1016/j.gca.2005.06.027

Author

Zhou, Zheng ; Ballentine, Chris ; Kipfer, Rolf et al. / Noble gas tracing of groundwater/coalbed methane interaction in the San Juan Basin, USA. In: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 2005 ; Vol. 69, No. 23. pp. 5413-5428.

Bibtex

@article{09ff4e09c1d14d6c865dbe211cda5478,
title = "Noble gas tracing of groundwater/coalbed methane interaction in the San Juan Basin, USA",
abstract = "The San Juan Basin natural gas field, located in northwestern New Mexico and southwestern Colorado in the USA, is a case-type coalbed methane system. Groundwater is thought to play a key role in both biogenic methane generation and the CO2 sequestration potential of coalbed systems. We show here how noble gases can be used to construct a physical model that describes the interaction between the groundwater system and the produced gas. We collected 28 gas samples from producing wells in the artesian overpressured high production region of the basin together with 8 gas samples from the underpressured low production zone as a control. Stable isotope and major species determination clearly characterize the gas in the high production region as dominantly biogenic in origin, and the underpressured low producing region as having a significant admix of thermogenic coal gas. 3He/4He ratios increase from 0.0836Ra at the basin margin to 0.318Ra towards the center, indicating a clear but small mantle He signature in all gases. Coherent fractionation of water-derived 20Ne/36Ar and crustal 4He/40Ar* are explained by a simple Rayleigh fractionation model of open system groundwater degassing. Low 20Ne concentrations compared to the model predicted values are accounted for by dilution of the groundwater-associated gas by desorbed coalbed methane. This Rayleigh fractionation and dilution model together with the gas production history allows us to quantify the amount of water involved in gas production at each well. The quantified water volumes in both underpressured and overpressured zones range from 1.7 × 103 m3 to 4.2 × 105 m3, with no clear distinction between over- and underpressured production zones. These results conclusively show that the volume of groundwater seen by coal does not play a role in determining the volume of methane produced by secondary biodegradation of these coalbeds. There is no requirement of continuous groundwater flow for renewing the microbes or nutrient components. We furthermore observe strong mass related isotopic fractionation of 20Ne/22Ne and 38Ar/36Ar isotopic ratios. This can be explained by a noble gas concentration gradient in the groundwater during gas production, which causes diffusive partial re-equilibration of the noble gas isotopes. It is important for the study of other systems in which extensive groundwater degassing may have occurred to recognize that severe isotopic fractionation of air-derived noble gases can occur when such concentration gradients are established during gas production. Excess air-derived Xe and Kr in our samples are shown to be related to the diluting coalbed methane and can only be accounted for if Xe and Kr are preferentially and volumetrically trapped within the coal matrix and released during biodegradation to form CH4.",
author = "Zheng Zhou and Chris Ballentine and Rolf Kipfer and Martin Schoell and Steve Thibodeaux",
year = "2005",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.gca.2005.06.027",
language = "English",
volume = "69",
pages = "5413--5428",
journal = "Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "23",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Noble gas tracing of groundwater/coalbed methane interaction in the San Juan Basin, USA

AU - Zhou, Zheng

AU - Ballentine, Chris

AU - Kipfer, Rolf

AU - Schoell, Martin

AU - Thibodeaux, Steve

PY - 2005/12/1

Y1 - 2005/12/1

N2 - The San Juan Basin natural gas field, located in northwestern New Mexico and southwestern Colorado in the USA, is a case-type coalbed methane system. Groundwater is thought to play a key role in both biogenic methane generation and the CO2 sequestration potential of coalbed systems. We show here how noble gases can be used to construct a physical model that describes the interaction between the groundwater system and the produced gas. We collected 28 gas samples from producing wells in the artesian overpressured high production region of the basin together with 8 gas samples from the underpressured low production zone as a control. Stable isotope and major species determination clearly characterize the gas in the high production region as dominantly biogenic in origin, and the underpressured low producing region as having a significant admix of thermogenic coal gas. 3He/4He ratios increase from 0.0836Ra at the basin margin to 0.318Ra towards the center, indicating a clear but small mantle He signature in all gases. Coherent fractionation of water-derived 20Ne/36Ar and crustal 4He/40Ar* are explained by a simple Rayleigh fractionation model of open system groundwater degassing. Low 20Ne concentrations compared to the model predicted values are accounted for by dilution of the groundwater-associated gas by desorbed coalbed methane. This Rayleigh fractionation and dilution model together with the gas production history allows us to quantify the amount of water involved in gas production at each well. The quantified water volumes in both underpressured and overpressured zones range from 1.7 × 103 m3 to 4.2 × 105 m3, with no clear distinction between over- and underpressured production zones. These results conclusively show that the volume of groundwater seen by coal does not play a role in determining the volume of methane produced by secondary biodegradation of these coalbeds. There is no requirement of continuous groundwater flow for renewing the microbes or nutrient components. We furthermore observe strong mass related isotopic fractionation of 20Ne/22Ne and 38Ar/36Ar isotopic ratios. This can be explained by a noble gas concentration gradient in the groundwater during gas production, which causes diffusive partial re-equilibration of the noble gas isotopes. It is important for the study of other systems in which extensive groundwater degassing may have occurred to recognize that severe isotopic fractionation of air-derived noble gases can occur when such concentration gradients are established during gas production. Excess air-derived Xe and Kr in our samples are shown to be related to the diluting coalbed methane and can only be accounted for if Xe and Kr are preferentially and volumetrically trapped within the coal matrix and released during biodegradation to form CH4.

AB - The San Juan Basin natural gas field, located in northwestern New Mexico and southwestern Colorado in the USA, is a case-type coalbed methane system. Groundwater is thought to play a key role in both biogenic methane generation and the CO2 sequestration potential of coalbed systems. We show here how noble gases can be used to construct a physical model that describes the interaction between the groundwater system and the produced gas. We collected 28 gas samples from producing wells in the artesian overpressured high production region of the basin together with 8 gas samples from the underpressured low production zone as a control. Stable isotope and major species determination clearly characterize the gas in the high production region as dominantly biogenic in origin, and the underpressured low producing region as having a significant admix of thermogenic coal gas. 3He/4He ratios increase from 0.0836Ra at the basin margin to 0.318Ra towards the center, indicating a clear but small mantle He signature in all gases. Coherent fractionation of water-derived 20Ne/36Ar and crustal 4He/40Ar* are explained by a simple Rayleigh fractionation model of open system groundwater degassing. Low 20Ne concentrations compared to the model predicted values are accounted for by dilution of the groundwater-associated gas by desorbed coalbed methane. This Rayleigh fractionation and dilution model together with the gas production history allows us to quantify the amount of water involved in gas production at each well. The quantified water volumes in both underpressured and overpressured zones range from 1.7 × 103 m3 to 4.2 × 105 m3, with no clear distinction between over- and underpressured production zones. These results conclusively show that the volume of groundwater seen by coal does not play a role in determining the volume of methane produced by secondary biodegradation of these coalbeds. There is no requirement of continuous groundwater flow for renewing the microbes or nutrient components. We furthermore observe strong mass related isotopic fractionation of 20Ne/22Ne and 38Ar/36Ar isotopic ratios. This can be explained by a noble gas concentration gradient in the groundwater during gas production, which causes diffusive partial re-equilibration of the noble gas isotopes. It is important for the study of other systems in which extensive groundwater degassing may have occurred to recognize that severe isotopic fractionation of air-derived noble gases can occur when such concentration gradients are established during gas production. Excess air-derived Xe and Kr in our samples are shown to be related to the diluting coalbed methane and can only be accounted for if Xe and Kr are preferentially and volumetrically trapped within the coal matrix and released during biodegradation to form CH4.

U2 - 10.1016/j.gca.2005.06.027

DO - 10.1016/j.gca.2005.06.027

M3 - Journal article

VL - 69

SP - 5413

EP - 5428

JO - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta

JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta

IS - 23

ER -