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OIL AND GAS
Sweet technique finds cause of sour oil and gas
by Staff Writers
Houston TX (SPX) Apr 11, 2016


This is an illustration of BIOCIDE 1. Image courtesy Jason Gaspar/Rice University. For a larger version of this image please go here.

In at least one - and probably many - oil and gas drilling operations, the use of biocides to prevent the souring of hydrocarbons wastes money and creates an unnecessary environmental burden, according to researchers at Rice University.

The Rice lab of environmental engineer Pedro Alvarez reported that soured hydrocarbons found in the Bakken Formation underneath the Northwest United States and Canada are caused by primarily geochemical reactions rather than microbial ones; the researchers questioned the need to pump costly biocides into the well to kill sulfide-producing microbes.

The team's finding offers a way to cut costs at wellheads where biocides may be unnecessary while keeping them out of the environment, where they may promote the development of biocide-resistant bacteria, Alvarez said.

The research appears in the American Chemical Society journal Environment Science and Technology Letters.

Soured hydrocarbons are those with high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide gas. The hydrogen sulfide gives oil and natural gas the smell of rotten eggs, can be toxic to breathe and is highly corrosive. For this reason, the gas has to be removed from crude oil before it can be transported or refined.

Curtailing the use of biocides when the source of souring is not from microbes would reduce operation costs and mitigate potential impacts to microbial ecosystems, Alvarez said.

The Rice-led team set out to solve a long-standing puzzle over what in an individual formation makes hydrocarbons go sour. Either microbial life or the geochemical environment can catalyze the reaction, but engineers are rarely able to determine which is happening.

Alvarez and his co-authors developed an improved map of temperatures to about 2 miles below the surface in eight representative Bakken Formation fracture wells. They showed that downhole temperatures in the formation are equal to or exceed the upper known temperature limit - 252 degrees Fahrenheit - for microorganisms' survival.

The team also analyzed isotopes of sulfur isolated from hydrogen sulfide taken from the wells. They found all of the isotopes tested suggested geochemical origins. Water samples from the same wells failed to yield DNA concentrations that would indicate the presence of microorganisms.

"The combination of temperature, sulfur isotope and microbial analyses makes scientific, environmental and financial sense," said Jason Gaspar, a Rice graduate student and lead author of the paper. "Using our method, we could characterize hydrogen sulfide for dozens of wells in a given shale play for less than the cost of adding biocide to one well alone."

Co-authors of the paper are Drew Davis, a graduate student at Texas A and M University, and Carlos Camacho, an associate geologist at Statoil, Austin, Texas. Gaspar and Davis were summer interns at Statoil. Alvarez is the George R. Brown Professor of Materials Science and NanoEngineering at Rice.


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