Physics
Scientific paper
May 1987
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1987gecoa..51.1083h&link_type=abstract
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (ISSN 0016-7037), vol. 51, May 1987, p. 1083-1097.
Physics
3
Alkenes, Bitumens, Clays, Hydrocarbons, Kerogen, Pyrolysis, Chromatography, Illite, Minerals, Montmorillonite, Water
Scientific paper
The effect of common sedimentary minerals (illite, Na-montmorillonite, or calcite) under different water concentrations on the generation and release of n-alkanes, acyclic isoprenoids, and select alkenes from oil-prone kerogens was investigated. Matrices containing Green River Formation kerogen or Monterey Formation kerogen, alone or in the presence of minerals, were heated at 200 or 300 C for periods of up to 1000 hours, and the pyrolysis products were analyzed. The influence of the first two clay minerals was found to be critically dependent on the water content. Under the dry pyrolysis conditions, both minerals significantly reduced alkene formation; the C12+ n-alkanes and acyclic isoprenoids were mostly destroyed by montmorillonite, but underwent only minor alteration with illite. Under hydrous conditions (mineral/water of 2/1), the effects of both minerals were substantially reduced. Calcite had no significant effect on the thermal evolution of the hydrocarbons.
Huizinga Bradley J.
Kaplan Isaac R.
Tannenbaum Eli
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