Abstract
Solid organic matter (OM) plays an essential role in the generation, migration, storage, and production of hydrocarbons from economically important shale rock formations. Electron microscopy images have documented spatial heterogeneity in the porosity of OM at nanoscale, and bulk spectroscopy measurements have documented large variation in the chemical composition of OM during petroleum generation. However, information regarding the heterogeneity of OM chemical composition at the nanoscale has been lacking. Here we demonstrate the first application of atomic force microscopy-based infrared spectroscopy (AFM-IR) to measure the chemical and mechanical heterogeneity of OM in shale at the nanoscale, orders of magnitude finer than achievable by traditional chemical imaging tools such as infrared microscopy. We present a combination of optical microscopy and AFM-IR imaging to characterize OM heterogeneity in an artificially matured series of New Albany Shales. The results document the evolution of individual organic macerals with maturation, providing a microscopic picture of the heterogeneous process of petroleum generation.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
The recent boom in unconventional oil and gas production from shale has revolutionized the energy landscape in the United States1 and stimulated both considerable research2,3,4,5 as well as environmental and political concerns. Shale is a fine-grained sedimentary rock, composed of solid organic matter (OM) scattered in a mineral framework. This solid OM is the source of petroleum, as the OM breaks down into oil and gas under high temperatures during a process known as maturation. The solid OM remaining after maturation develops a network of nanoscale pores responsible for hydrocarbon storage and transport during petroleum production and migration over geologic time6,7,8. Additionally, OM partially controls shale’s geomechanical properties as it is the softest component, affecting both fracturing efficiency and flow of petroleum to the wellbore9. Therefore, investigation of geochemical and geomechanical properties of OM in shale is important for building robust geological models to access unconventional resources and enhance hydrocarbon production efficiency.
Solid OM in shale is typically highly heterogeneous at the submicron length scale. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) has shown that adjacent micron-sized OM grains sometimes differ greatly in porosity10. This heterogeneity can result from innate differences in the OM originally deposited in the shale and potentially from local variations in the extent of thermal alteration brought on by catalysis from nearby mineral grains. While SEM provides detailed, high-resolution information on pores in OM, it provides no information on the type, chemical composition, or mechanical properties of that OM. Organic petrography via incident light microscopy allows the identification of various types of organic components and has been broadly applied to shale petroleum systems11, but again this technique provides no direct molecular or mechanical data. Numerous bulk measurements, such as programmed pyrolysis (Rock-Eval) and various spectroscopies12 including infrared spectroscopy13,14, have documented dramatic variations in the average chemical composition of OM across a wide maturation range, but these bulk analyses cannot assess heterogeneity at small spatial scales. Progress toward documenting geochemical heterogeneity in shale has been realized by application of Fourier transform infrared microscopy (micro-FTIR)15,16,17,18,19. Nevertheless, micro-FTIR cannot reliably resolve chemical features at the submicron length scale relevant to shale due to the diffraction limit17,19,20. Alternatively, Raman imaging provides structural information on the degree of organization of OM at the micron length scale but suffers from strong fluorescence background for immature shale samples21,22,23. Geomechanical heterogeneity in shale has been studied by nanoindentation at the micron length scale24,25 and by atomic force microscopy (AFM) in peak force tapping mode at nanoscale26,27, but these techniques provide no information regarding chemical composition.
AFM-based infrared spectroscopy (AFM-IR) is a rapidly emerging technique in materials and life sciences28,29,30,31,32,33,34 that provides chemical and mechanical stiffness mapping at nanoscale unaffected by the diffraction limit, in additional to topographic imaging by AFM. During the measurement, an AFM probe with tip radius smaller than 25 nm is placed in contact with an area of interest simultaneously irradiated with a tunable IR laser29. When the laser wavelength is tuned to an infrared absorption band of the sample material, the sample thermally expands as the energy of absorbed photons is converted to heat. That thermal expansion acts as a force impulse on the AFM cantilever, driving it into oscillation. Oscillation amplitude is directly proportional to the local IR absorption coefficient at the IR wavelength at which the sample is irradiated. Because the AFM tip remains in contact with the sample, the contact resonance (CR) frequency of the coupled sample-cantilever system provides information about the sample’s mechanical stiffness, with higher frequency corresponding to stiffer materials and lower to softer materials (quantitatively translating the measured CR frequency to stiffness requires extensive modeling of the mechanical response of the cantilever to the photothermal expansion of the sample, so stiffness in AFM-IR measurements is typically described using the CR frequency)28,29,30. Thus, at a fixed laser wavelength, IR absorption and stiffness images can be collected simultaneously by recording the AFM cantilever oscillation amplitude and frequency. The spatial resolution is independent of the IR laser spot size, thus no longer limited by diffraction, but instead determined by the contact area between the probe and the sample as well as by the sample’s thermomechanical properties28,29,30,31,35. The typical spatial resolution of the resulting chemical image is ~100 nm28,29,30,31,35, orders of magnitude finer than the spatial resolution attainable by traditional micro-FTIR. Additionally, localized IR spectra can be obtained by measuring the AFM oscillation amplitude while tuning the IR laser wavelength. The resulting local IR absorption spectra are nearly identical to those measured with bulk transmission FTIR28,29,30,31,35, providing information on chemical composition and structural characteristics.
In this study, we demonstrate the first application of AFM-IR in the earth sciences. This technique is used to provide direct, in situ, simultaneous geochemical and geomechanical characterization of individual dispersed OM particles at nanoscale. The AFM-IR images are correlated with optical microscopy images to analyze chemical and mechanical properties of macerals (optically discernible organic constituents) in a New Albany Shale sample. To understand the impacts of maturation on nanoscale OM composition, similar measurements are performed on a series of samples prepared to different stages of maturation by laboratory hydrous pyrolysis. This approach allows evaluation of compositional and mechanical variations among different macerals and unravels the chemical evolution of different macerals with increasing maturity. Beyond the bulk picture provided by conventional analysis, this approach of following compositional and mechanical evolution of individual macerals at the relevant length scale during maturation provides a microscopic picture of the heterogeneous process of petroleum generation.
Results
Shale rock assessment
An OM-rich shale sample from Middle Devonian-Lower Mississippian New Albany Shale is chosen because it holds abundant, distinct, and readily identified macerals. The New Albany Shale sample is organic-rich, with total organic carbon (TOC) content of 14.2 wt.% (Table 1). The computed hydrogen index (HI) and oxygen index (OI) from Rock-Eval show the OM contains relatively high hydrogen/carbon ratio and low oxygen/carbon ratio. The sample is immature, with T max < 435 °C and production index (PI) < 0.10, suggesting it is at the onset of oil generation36. This assessment agrees with solid bitumen reflectance (BRo) of 0.25% as measured by optical microscopy. Solid bitumen reflectance is used here instead of conventional maturity indicators (e.g., vitrinite reflectance) owing to scarcity and difficulty in identification of vitrinite particles20,37.
Hydrous pyrolysis of organic-rich shale at high temperature (320–360 °C) is used to simulate thermal maturation that takes place over millions of years in a sedimentary basin, providing a direct test of the impact of maturity, uncomplicated by other factors such as variation in mineralogy38,39. To understand how OM composition evolves with maturity, the immature New Albany Shale sample is pyrolyzed at temperatures ranging from 300 to 360 °C for 72 h, resulting in BRo values ranging from 0.41 to 1.17%. A linear relationship between pyrolysis temperature and BRo (Supplementary Fig. 1) indicates BRo can be used to represent thermal maturity. The samples range from immature to late mature, including the onset of oil generation, early/peak oil generation, and late oil/early wet gas generation. TOC and Rock-Eval tests (Table 1) on the original New Albany Shale and its hydrous pyrolysis residues show systematic decrease in TOC, S2, and HI, as well as increase in T max and PI, with increasing hydrous pyrolysis temperature, indicating systematic increase in thermal maturity and conversion of OM to petroleum.
Correlative AFM-IR and incident light microscopy imaging
Macerals of interest in the New Albany Shale are imaged and identified by incident light microscopy and then registered and imaged by AFM-IR. In the unpyrolyzed (immature) sample, abundant solid bitumen (gray solid hydrocarbon residue from amorphous organic matter conversion) and Tasmanites (a unicellular planktonic marine alga) are present, along with minor inertinite (remains of carbonized wood) fractions. For example, Fig. 1a shows the incident white light microscopy image, illustrating discrete solid bitumen and inertinite macerals from the unpyrolyzed immature New Albany Shale sample. The field of view in this image is 30 × 30 µm2, comparable to a single pixel in a traditional micro-FTIR instrument. The AFM-IR measurements are performed in the same area, including images of high-resolution topography (Fig. 1b), IR absorption (Fig. 1c), and mechanical stiffness (Fig. 1d), all acquired with pixel size of 100 × 100 nm2. The three AFM-IR images were simultaneously acquired by irradiating the sample with the IR fixed at 2920 cm−1, characteristic of absorption by OM aliphatic C–H stretching. This feature40 is conveniently distant from common absorption bands in inorganic phases41,42, so imaging at this wavenumber enables interference-free mapping of OM. The topography image (Fig. 1b) shows relatively little contrast, indicating a smooth surface after mechanical polishing, such that OM cannot be identified. Instead, the discrete macerals are readily identified as having intense 2920 cm−1 absorption (Fig. 1c) and low mechanical stiffness (Fig. 1d) relative to the surrounding mineral matter. The closely matching spatial distributions seen in the white light microscopy image and AFM-IR images confirm accurate registration.
In addition to the solid bitumen and inertinite macerals, the Tasmanites maceral in the immature New Albany Shale is identified and located by organic petrography (Fig. 2a). As before, the topography (Fig. 2b), IR absorption (Fig. 2c), and stiffness (Fig. 2d) images of the same area are collected with the AFM-IR by fixing the IR wavelength at 2920 cm−1. Topography again indicates a well polished surface, with little distinction between OM and the inorganic matrix. IR mapping shows that Tasmanites strongly absorbs at 2920 cm−1, whereas the small inorganic particle (~1 μm across) entrained inside (indicated by the gray arrow) does not absorb. The stiffness image reveals significant contrast between Tasmanites, the embedded particle, and surrounding mineral matrix. The embedded particle has similar stiffness to the mineral matrix and does not absorb at 2920 cm−1, confirming its assignment as mineral matter. These observations demonstrate the capability of documenting spatial variability in chemistry and mechanical properties of shale at nanoscale with AFM-IR.
Geomechanical and geochemical variations among macerals
Geomechanical heterogeneity can be estimated by analyzing the distribution of contact resonance (CR) frequencies measured on each maceral, as CR frequency is positively correlated with sample stiffness. Inertinite, solid bitumen, and Tasmanites are highlighted in stiffness images Fig. 3a–c, respectively. Prior to the AFM-IR imaging, the AFM probes are carefully selected to have nearly the same contact resonance frequency when measured on a polystyrene thin film sample. Figure 3d displays the distribution of CR frequencies from pixels assigned as inertinite (highlighted in Fig. 3a), where each pixel (100 × 100 nm2) contributes one data point. Inertinite accounts for an area of 130.74 μm2, with 13,074 measured points yielding an average CR frequency of 182.1 kHz ± 1.7 kHz (Table 2). Figure 3e, f displays the resulting CR frequency distributions of solid bitumen (178.8 kHz ± 3.6 kHz) and Tasmanites (177.2 kHz ± 4.3 kHz), indicating the average mechanical stiffnesses of Tasmanites is slightly less than solid bitumen and much lower than inertinite.
Geochemical heterogeneity can be probed by measuring the IR spectra collected at different locations corresponding to different macerals. Localized IR spectra are obtained for inertinite, solid bitumen, and Tasmanites, as indicated by the colored dots in Fig. 3a-c. Because the absolute intensities of localized IR spectra are affected by absorbing material thickness, all spectra are normalized for comparison. All localized spectra illustrate the characteristic bands of IR absorption in OM: aliphatic absorption at 2920 cm−1, 2850 cm−1, 1450 cm−1, and 1375 cm−1; aromatic absorption at 3100–3000 cm−1 and 1600 cm−1; and carboxyl absorption at ~1710 cm−1 (details of band assignments for IR spectra of OM are described in the “Methods” section). Different locations within a maceral present nearly identical IR spectra, as observed for the inertinite (Fig. 3g), solid bitumen (Fig. 3h), and Tasmanites (Fig. 3i) macerals. These results indicate compositional homogeneity within a maceral type. However, large variations exist between maceral types in immature shale (see also Supplementary Fig. 2). Inertinite displays a strong aromatic character, exhibiting a distinct aromatic absorbance band at 3000–3100 cm−1, strong aromatic absorbance at 1600 cm−1, and relatively low oxygenated group stretching at ~1710 cm−1. Tasmanites shows intense C=O absorption at ~1710 cm−1 and low aromatic absorption at 1600 cm−1. Solid bitumen shows no aromatic C–H absorbance at 3000–3100 cm−1, modest aromatic C=C ring stretching at 1600 cm−1 and modest C=O stretching at ~1710 cm−1.
IR ratios from the average localized IR spectra from inertinite, solid bitumen, and Tasmanites in immature New Albany Shale are computed to evaluate quantitatively the chemical differences between OM types (Table 2). Four IR ratios are computed, similar to those defined in the bulk IR literature14,17,43: aromaticity (aromatic C−H versus aliphatic C−H stretching modes), CH3/CH2 (methyl-to-methylene ratio, an indicator of aliphatic chain length and/or the degree of branching of aliphatic moieties), C-factor (proportional to the oxygenated character), and A-factor (proportional to the aliphatic character). Results (Table 2) show that the various OM types in the New Albany Shale are distinct in terms of their chemical composition. Tasmanites is relatively rich in oxygenated functional groups and aliphatic carbon, with relatively long chains and little aromatic carbon. Inertinite lies on the other extreme, dominated by aromatic carbon with relatively short chains and relatively little oxygenated functional groups or aliphatic carbon. Solid bitumen is intermediate in all regards, with moderate amounts of aliphatic carbon, aromatic carbon, oxygenated fuctional groups, and chain length. The mechanical stiffness (Table 2) is correlated with the chemical composition of OM, showing increasing stiffness with higher aromaticity, similar to other findings4,27.
Evolution of chemical composition of individual macerals
Maturation is the process under which petroleum is generated by thermal cracking of OM at elevated temperature. The combination of organic petrography with AFM-IR allows the maturation process to be followed on a maceral-by-maceral basis, supplementing the traditional analysis of bulk chemical changes in OM14,43. Here the New Albany Shale is artificially matured by hydrous pyrolysis to various stages in the petroleum generation process, and the evolution in the abundance of individual macerals is measured by petrography while the evolution in the composition of individual macerals is measured by AFM-IR.
Initially, immature New Albany Shale holds abundant solid bitumen and Tasmanites, with a small fraction of intertinite. During maturation, the abundance of inertinite remains qualitatively unchanged. However, the abundance of Tasmanites and solid bitumen change dramatically during maturation. Similar to petrographic observations in other shale plays11, Tasmanites is observed to decrease in abundance throughout the process, finally disappearing at HP temperatures ≥340 °C, while solid bitumen becomes the dominant maceral at high temperatures.
AFM-IR is used to measure to composition of individual macerals, such as solid bitumen, at different maturities (see example of correlative imaging of micron-scale solid bitumen particles in pyrolyzed shale in Supplementary Fig. 3). Localized IR spectra averaged over three or more different solid bitumen particles in each of the original New Albany Shale sample and its hydrous pyrolysis derivatives are plotted in Fig. 4a (those individual spectra are plotted in Supplementary Figs. 4–7). The A-factor (aliphatic versus aromatic) and C-factor (oxygenated versus aromatic functional groups) are calculated from the average spectra and used as IR proxies for atomic H/C and O/C ratios, respectively43. Figure 4d plots these parameters similar to a standard van Krevelen diagram, with green points labeled by maturity as measured by solid bitumen reflectance (BRo). The plot illustrates the evolution path of solid bitumen during thermal alteration, showing early loss of oxygenated functional groups followed by loss of aliphatic content at higher pyrolysis tempreatures, consistent with trends observed previously in bulk OM43. A similar analysis was perfomed to investigate the chemical evolution of inertinite (Fig. 4b) and Tasmanites (Fig. 4c) with maturity. Direct comparison of the compositional evolution of all macerals is shown in the pseudo van Krevelen diagram (Fig. 4d). Significant differences between the composition of these macerals are seen at low maturity, but those compositional differences become less significant at higher maturity when the composition of each maceral type tends toward graphite-like (high aromatic content and low aliphatic and oxygenated content). Macerals that are rich in aliphatic/oxygenated content at low maturity (such as Tasmanites) undergo relatively large compositional changes with maturity, while macerals that are already dominated by aromatic carbon at low maturity (such as inertinite) undergo relatively small compositional changes with maturity. For example, a relatively large difference is found between the composition of Tasmanites at 0.25% BRo and at 0.65% BRo (the highest maturity at which Tasmanites is detected), consistent with the high petroleum generation potential of Tasmanites. Inertinite, on the other hand, is mostly unaffected by maturation, with little change in its abundance or composition. Moreover, the range of compositions spanned by a single maceral at different thermal maturities is comparable to the range of compositions spanned by different macerals at a single (low) thermal maturity. This observation suggests that the impact of maturation in OM composition is driven by both an evolution of the abundance of different macerals and a variation in the composition of individual macerals.
In conclusion, here we demonstrate AFM-IR as a powerful new tool to examine organic chemical and mechanical heterogeneity in shale at nanoscale. AFM-IR images can be registered with traditional optical microscopy images, allowing geochemical and geomechanical characterization of individual macerals assigned by organic petrography. The measurement provides chemical and mechanical mapping at a spatial resolution orders of magnitude finer than provided by traditional diffraction-limited IR microscopy, enabling interrogation of chemical and mechanical heterogeneity at the submicron length scales relevant for shale. Using this approach, we examined the evolution of OM composition during petroleum generation at the maceral level. Immature shale contains several different macerals and the average composition of each maceral type differs widely, although the compositional variation between different locations belonging to the same maceral type is limited. The composition of the macerals controls their mechanical properties, with macerals enriched in aromatic carbon (and lean in aliphatic carbon) having relatively high mechanical stiffnesses. During maturation, both the abundance and the composition of the individual macerals evolve. Organic petrology revealed that originally present macerals, such as Tasmanites, are depleted during petroleum generation, and the OM in shale is dominated by the solid bitumen maceral at maturities above the peak oil level. AFM-IR revealed that the composition of each maceral evolves as well, as each maceral becomes enriched in aromatic carbon and depleted in oxygenated carbon during maturation, similar to the trend commonly observed for bulk analysis of OM. The results suggest the maturation process involves an evolution in both the abundance of individual macerals and in the composition of those macerals.
Methods
Hydrous pyrolysis
Hydrous pyrolysis followed the method of Lewan44,45. The crushed rock samples (2–4 g, 1–3 mm maximum size) were loaded into gas chromatograph ovens and isothermally heated for 72 h, plus ~5–10 min warm-up. Rock residues were rinsed in acetone at experiment conclusion to remove generated bitumens from surfaces. Residues were vacuum-dried overnight prior to preparation for petrographic and AFM-IR analysis.
Organic petrography analysis via optical microscopy
Organic petrographic techniques included maceral identification in epi-fluorescence and reflected white light under oil immersion, and reflectance measurements of solid bitumen for maturity estimation. The New Albany Shale rock powder and its pyrolysis residues (~1 mm size) were mounted in heat-setting plastic 1-inch (25.4 mm) round pellets and observed using a reflected light microscope (Zeiss) with oil immersion objectives (×50, 1.0 NA; ×100, 1.30 NA). Sample preparation followed ASTM D279746 wherein thermoset plastic pellet sample mounts were mechanically ground and polished by paper (120–1200 grit) using water as lubricant followed by final polish on matte clothes with 1.0 µm alumina and 0.05 colloidal silica abrasives to achieve smooth surfaces for microscopic and AFM-IR analysis. Maceral identification and solid bitumen reflectance measurements followed ASTM D770847 as previously described11. Reflectance analysis emplayed a Leica DM4000 microscope with LED illumination and monochrome camera detection with the computer program DISKUS-FOSSIL by Hilgers Technisches Buero and a Klein and Becker YAG calibration standard (0.908% Ro). Reflectance is a measurement of the percentage of light reflected from macerals under oil immersion. For the New Albany Shale sample and its pyrolysis residues, reflectance of 30–50 random individual solid bitumen particles was measured and the mean value reported as BRo.
Bulk characterization of shale
Total organic carbon (TOC) analysis and Rock-Eval II (a programmed pyrolysis method) are routine source rock geochemistry characterization methods, allowing evaluation of the amount, type and thermal maturity of organic matter present. TOC and Rock-Eval were carried out in a commercial laboratory following methods previously described in Barker48 and Peters et al.36 Leco TOC measurements were performed by combustion of acidified pulverized rock to quantify organic richness. Rock-Eval II pyrolysis measures hydrocarbon generating potential and thermal maturity. Rock-Eval heats samples in programmed stages ranging from 100 to 850 °C, yielding four parameters: S1 measures the amount of vaporized free hydrocarbons, S2 measures the amount of hydrocarbons generated through thermal cracking of nonvolatile organic matter, S3 measures the amount of CO2 produced during pyrolysis, and T max (pyrolysis temperature during maximum generation of hydrocarbons). S1, S2, and S3 are used to compute hydrogen, oxygen, and production indices [HI: 100 × S2/TOC; OI: 100 × S3/TOC; PI: S1/(S1 + S2)]. HI and OI determine the organic matter type, whereas T max and PI represent the thermal maturity of organic matter.
AFM-IR measurements
The localized nanoscale mid-IR spectra and images were carried out using the commercial NanoIR2 AFM-IR instrument (Anasys Instruments). The AFM-IR technique is accomplished by coupling a pulsed tunable IR source with an AFM. The IR source covers a broad range of the mid-IR region, produced by a tunable optical parametric oscillator laser system (EKSPLA) with ~ 10 ns pulse length at a repetition rate of 1 kHz.
The topography, IR absorption, and contact resonance frequency image (stiffness map) are collected simultaneously at a fixed wavenumber of interest. All images are acquired in contact mode using probes (Model: PR-EX-NIR2, Anasys Instruments) with a resonance frequency of 13 ± 4 kHz and a spring constant of 0.07−0.4 N m−1. The characterization measures the photothermal-induced resonance of the AFM cantilever28,29,30,31. Here, the second mode of cantilever oscillation is selected by applying a bandpass filter centered at 180 kHz with 50 kHz window. The images are acquired at a scan rate of 0.2 Hz and averaged over 8 pulses, with a 100 nm × 100 nm spatial resolution. The image acquisition time is ~25 min for a 30 × 30 μm area or 11 min for a 20 × 20 μm area. The spatial resolution of IR absorption imaging is affected by sample thermomechanical properties such as thermal expansion coefficient and thermal conductivity28,29,30,31. The typical spatial resolution of IR images is around 100 nm. Stiffness mapping offers enhanced resolution limited by the tip radius of the cantilever, typically in the range of 10 s of nanometers.
Spectral analysis and IR structural indices calculation
Localized IR spectra were collected and analyzed using Analysis Studio software (version 3.11.5883, Anasys Instruments) and MATLAB program. IR focus is optimized at 1450 cm−1, 1600 cm−1, and 2920 cm−1 prior to the data collection and all IR spectra are normalized to the incident power. IR spectra are acquired from 1300 to 1800 cm−1 and 2800 to 3100 cm−1 with an interval of 4 cm−1 and averaging each data point over 256 pulses. The spectral acquisition time is around 5 min. The localized IR spectra is first smoothed using a three-point average in Analysis Studio, followed by linear baseline removal, normalized, and plotted in MATLAB.
Curve fitting of the absorbance bands in IR spectra between 1500−1800 cm−1 and 2800−3100 cm−1 were performed to determine spectral parameters in MATLAB. A combination of Lorentzian–Gaussian curve functions provides a good statistical reconstruction of the measured IR spectra of complex organic matter43. The parameters are fitted to the experimental envelope by a least squares iterative procedure. All peaks centers, peak amplitudes, peak half-widths, relative fraction of Lorentzian character for the fit are allowed to vary from initial guesses. Generally, the solved peak centers are typically within a few centimeters from the initialization. The IR structural parameters, namely, Aromaticity, CH3/CH2, C-Factor, A-Factor, are computed from the peak area ratios as listed in Supplementary Table 1.
The spectral region at 2800–3000 cm−1 can be resolved into five discrete bands: CH stretching (2897 cm−1), symmetric CH2 stretching (2857 cm−1), CH2 asymmetric stretching (2925 cm−1), CH3 symmetric stretching (2872 cm−1), and CH3 asymmetric stretching (2962 cm−1). The broad absorbance band between 3000 and 3100 cm−1 region is assigned to aromatic C–H stretching and used to compute Aromaticity. CH3/CH2 ratio are computed from the ratio of integrated peak areas arising from 2957 and 2925 cm−1, respectively, i.e., A2957/A2925.
The 1500–1800 cm−1 region contains overlapping absorbance bands associated with oxygenated and aromatic carbon groups. The broad absorbance 1600–1630 cm−1 corresponds to aromatic carbon–carbon stretching, and it can be resolved as two distinct peaks in the spectra of organic materials centered at 1610 and 1630 cm−1. A1600–1630 represents the integrated peak intensity of the aromatic C=C vibrations centered at 1610 and 1630 cm−1. The 1450 and 1375 cm−1 absorption signals are due to aliphatic C–H bending. C-factor represents the intensity ratio of the oxygenated versus aromatic functional groups. A-factor is the intensity ratio of aliphatic/ (aliphatic + aromatic) bands. A-factor is calculated slightly different from Craddock’s method43. The integrated peak area under 1450 cm−1 is used instead of the area under 2857 and 2925 as the aliphatic absorption bands. This is because the pulsed optical parametric oscillator (OPO) laser used in the nano-IR instrument has two distinct stages. The laser spot size and focus is different in the different stages, thus it is difficult to compute quantitative IR ratios using intensity values from two different stages.
Data availability
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the authors on reasonable request (see author contributions for specific data sets).
References
Kerr, R. A. Natural gas from shale bursts onto the scene. Science 328, 1624–1626 (2010).
Falk, K., Coasne, B., Pellenq, R., Ulm, F.-J. & Bocquet, L. Subcontinuum mass transport of condensed hydrocarbons in nanoporous media. Nat. Commun. 6, 6949 (2015).
Lee, T., Bocquet, L. & Coasne, B. Activated desorption at heterogeneous interfaces and long-time kinetics of hydrocarbon recovery from nanoporous media. Nat. Commun. 7, 11890 (2016).
Bousige, C. et al. Realistic molecular model of kerogen’s nanostructure. Nat. Mater. 15, 576–582 (2016).
Monteiro, P. J. M., Rycroft, C. H. & Barenblatt, G. I. A mathematical model of fluid and gas flow in nanoporous media. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 109, 20309–20313 (2012).
Curtis, J. B. Fractured shale-gas systems. Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol. Bull. 86, 1921–1938 (2002).
Jarvie, D. M., Hill, R. J., Ruble, T. E. & Pollastro, R. M. Unconventional shale-gas systems: The Mississippian Barnett Shale of north-central Texas as one model for thermogenic shale-gas assessment. Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol. Bull. 91, 475–499 (2007).
Ross, D. J. K. & Marc Bustin, R. The importance of shale composition and pore structure upon gas storage potential of shale gas reservoirs. Mar. Pet. Geol. 26, 916–927 (2009).
Vernik, L. & Landis, C. Elastic anisotropy of source rocks; implications for hydrocarbon generation and primary migration. Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol. Bull. 80, 531–544 (1996).
Curtis, M. E., Cardott, B. J., Sondergeld, C. H. & Rai, C. S. Development of organic porosity in the Woodford Shale with increasing thermal maturity. Int. J. Coal Geol. 103, 26–31 (2012).
Hackley, P. C. & Cardott, B. J. Application of organic petrography in North American shale petroleum systems: a review. Int. J. Coal Geol. 163, 8–51 (2016).
Kelemen, S. R. et al. Direct characterization of kerogen by X-ray and solid-state 13 C nuclear magnetic resonance methods. Energy Fuels 21, 1548–1561 (2007).
Rouxhet, P., Robin, P. & Nicaise, G. in Kerogen—Insoluble Organic Matter from Sedimentary Rocks (ed Durand, B.) pp. 163–190 (Technip, Paris, 1980).
Lis, G. P., Mastalerz, M., Schimmelmann, A., Lewan, M. D. & Stankiewicz, B. A. FTIR absorption indices for thermal maturity in comparison with vitrinite reflectance R0 in type-II kerogens from Devonian black shales. Org. Geochem. 36, 1533–1552 (2005).
Chen, Y., Furmann, A., Mastalerz, M. & Schimmelmann, A. Quantitative analysis of shales by KBr-FTIR and micro-FTIR. Fuel 116, 538–549 (2014).
Chen, Y., Mastalerz, M. & Schimmelmann, A. Heterogeneity of shale documented by micro-FTIR and image analysis. J. Microsc. 256, 177–189 (2014).
Chen, Y. et al. Applications of micro-fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) in the geological sciences—a review. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 16, 26227 (2015).
Washburn, K. E., Birdwell, J. E., Foster, M. & Gutierrez, F. Detailed description of oil shale organic and mineralogical heterogeneity via fourier transform infrared microscopy. Energy Fuels 29, 4264–4271 (2015).
Gasaway, C., Mastalerz, M., Krause, F. E. D., Clarkson, C. & Debuhr, C. Applicability of micro-FTIR in detecting shale heterogeneity. J. Microsc. 265, 60–72 (2017).
Wei, L., Wang, Y. & Mastalerz, M. Comparative optical properties of macerals and statistical evaluation of mis-identification of vitrinite and solid bitumen from early mature Middle Devonian – Lower Mississippian New Albany Shale: implications for thermal maturity assessment. Int. J. Coal Geol. 168(Part 2), 222–236 (2016).
Kelemen, S. R. & Fang, H. L. Maturity trends in raman spectra from kerogen and coal. Energy Fuels 15, 653–658 (2001).
Pasteris, J. D. & Wopenka, B. Necessary, but not sufficient: Raman identification of disordered carbon as a signature of ancient life. Astrobiology 3, 727–738 (2003).
Schopf, J. W., Kudryavtsev, A. B., Agresti, D. G., Czaja, A. D. & Wdowiak, T. J. Raman imagery: a new approach to assess the geochemical maturity and biogenicity of permineralized Precambrian fossils. Astrobiology 5, 333–371 (2005).
Abedi, S., Slim, M. & Ulm, F.-J. Nanomechanics of organic-rich shales: the role of thermal maturity and organic matter content on texture. Acta Geotech. 11, 775–787 (2016).
Abedi, S., Slim, M., Hofmann, R., Bryndzia, T. & Ulm, F.-J. Nanochemo-mechanical signature of organic-rich shales: a coupled indentation–EDX analysis. Acta Geotech. 11, 559–572 (2016).
Eliyahu, M., Emmanuel, S., Day-Stirrat, R. J. & Macaulay, C. I. Mechanical properties of organic matter in shales mapped at the nanometer scale. Mar. Pet. Geol. 59, 294–304 (2015).
Emmanuel, S., Eliyahu, M., Day-Stirrat, R. J., Hofmann, R. & Macaulay, C. I. Impact of thermal maturation on nano-scale elastic properties of organic matter in shales. Mar. Pet. Geol. 70, 175–184 (2016).
Dazzi, A., Glotin, F. & Carminati, R. Theory of infrared nanospectroscopy by photothermal induced resonance. J. Appl. Phys. 107, 124519 (2010).
Dazzi, A. et al. AFM–IR: combining atomic force microscopy and infrared spectroscopy for nanoscale chemical characterization. Appl. Spectrosc. 66, 1365–1384 (2012).
Dazzi, A. & Prater, C. B. AFM-IR: technology and applications in nanoscale infrared spectroscopy and chemical imaging. Chem. Rev. 117, 5146–5173 (2017).
Centrone, A. Infrared imaging and spectroscopy beyond the diffraction limit. Annu. Rev. Anal. Chem. 8, 101–126 (2015).
Qin, N. et al. Nanoscale probing of electron-regulated structural transitions in silk proteins by near-field IR imaging and nano-spectroscopy. Nat. Commun. 7, 13079 (2016).
Ruggeri, F. S. et al. Infrared nanospectroscopy characterization of oligomeric and fibrillar aggregates during amyloid formation. Nat. Commun. 6, 7831 (2015).
Khanikaev, A. B. et al. Experimental demonstration of the microscopic origin of circular dichroism in two-dimensional metamaterials. Nat. Commun. 7, 12045 (2016).
Lahiri, B., Holland, G. & Centrone, A. Chemical imaging: chemical imaging beyond the diffraction limit: experimental validation of the PTIR technique (Small 3/2013). Small 9, 488–488 (2013).
Peters, K. Guidelines for evaluating petroleum source rock using programmed pyrolysis. Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol. Bull. 70, 318–329 (1986).
Hartkopf-Fröder, C., Königshof, P., Littke, R. & Schwarzbauer, J. Optical thermal maturity parameters and organic geochemical alteration at low grade diagenesis to anchimetamorphism: a review. Int. J. Coal Geol. 150–151, 74–119 (2015).
Lewan, M. D. et al. Evaluation of petroleum generation by hydrous pyrolysis experimentation [and discussion]. Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. Ser. A Math. Phys. Sci. 315, 123–134 (1985).
Lewan, M. D. in Organic Geochemistry: Principles and Applications (eds Engel, M. H. & Macko, S. A.) pp. 419–442 (Springer US, New York, 1993).
Charsky, A. & Herron, M. in Proceedings of the International Symposium of the Society of Core Analysts (Society of Core Analysts, Aberdeen, UK, 2012).
Matteson, A. & Herron, M. M. in Society of Core Analysts Conference. Paper No. 9308. pp. 1–15 (Society of Core Analysts, Houston, TX, 1993).
Herron, M. M., Matteson, A. & Gustavson, G. Dual-Range FT-IR Mineralogy and the Analysis of Sedimentary Formations. Paper SCA-9729 (International Symposium Society Core Analysts, Calgary, Canada, 1997).
Craddock, P. R. et al. Evolution of kerogen and bitumen during thermal maturation via semi-open pyrolysis investigated by infrared spectroscopy. Energy Fuels 29, 2197–2210 (2015).
Lewan, M. D. in Organic Geochemistry: Principles and Applications (eds Engel, M. H. & Macko, S. S.) 419–442 (Plenum Press, New York, 1993).
Lewan, M. D. Experiments on the role of water in petroleum formation. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 61, 3691–3723 (1997).
ASTM. in Annual Book of ASTM Standards, Petroleum Products, Lubricants, and Fossil Fuels; Gaseous Fuels; Coal and Coke, Sec. 5, V. 5.06 pp. 542–546 (ASTM International, West Conshohocken, PA, 2016).
ASTM. in Annual Book of ASTM Standards, Petroleum Products, Lubricants, and Fossil Fuels; Gaseous Fuels; Coal and Coke, Sec. 5, V. 5.06 pp. 923–932 (ASTM International, West Conshohocken, PA, 2016).
Barker, C. Pyrolysis techniques for source-rock evaluation. Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol. Bull. 58, 2349–2361 (1974).
Acknowledgements
Reviews by Aaron Jubb (USGS), Robert L. Kleinberg (Schlumberger), and John Ratulowski (Schlumberger) improved this manuscript. Peter Warwick (USGS) contributed the New Albany shale sample. Paul R. Craddock (Schlumberger) provided suggestions toward spectral analysis. This research was funded in part by the USGS Energy Resources Program. Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
A.P. developed the concept of AFM-IR characterization of shale samples, J.Y. conceived and designed the experiments, and P.H. conceived the approach of sample evaluation across thermal gradients. J.H. and P.H. polished and prepared the New Albany shale sample, measured the bulk chemistry with TOC and Rock-Eval, and identified and imaged maceral types using optical microscopy. J.Y. performed the AFM-IR imaging and localized IR experiments and together with A.P. developed spectral analysis. All authors discussed the data. J.Y. wrote the manuscript with support from P.H. and A.P.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Additional information
Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Electronic supplementary material
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Yang, J., Hatcherian, J., Hackley, P.C. et al. Nanoscale geochemical and geomechanical characterization of organic matter in shale. Nat Commun 8, 2179 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02254-0
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02254-0
This article is cited by
-
The role of water in the laboratory thermal advancement of immature type I kerogen from the Cretaceous Qingshankou Formation in China
Scientific Reports (2023)
-
Predictive Power of Theoretical Adsorption Models for Gases (H2, CO2 and CH4) in Overmature Kerogen
Arabian Journal for Science and Engineering (2023)
-
Nanomechanics of minerals: understandings and developments through instrumented nanoindentation techniques
Physics and Chemistry of Minerals (2023)
-
Applications of Spectroscopic Techniques for Characterization of Polymer Nanocomposite: A Review
Journal of Inorganic and Organometallic Polymers and Materials (2022)
-
Kerogen nanoscale structure and CO2 adsorption in shale micropores
Scientific Reports (2021)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.