School of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
School of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne, UK ; Petroleum Reservoir Group, Department of Geoscience, University of Calgary Calgary, AB, Canada.
Front Microbiol. 2014 Nov 11;5:566. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00566. eCollection 2014.
Our understanding of the processes underlying the formation of heavy oil has been transformed in the last decade. The process was once thought to be driven by oxygen delivered to deep petroleum reservoirs by meteoric water. This paradigm has been replaced by a view that the process is anaerobic and frequently associated with methanogenic hydrocarbon degradation. The thermal history of a reservoir exerts a fundamental control on the occurrence of biodegraded petroleum, and microbial activity is focused at the base of the oil column in the oil water transition zone, that represents a hotspot in the petroleum reservoir biome. Here we present a synthesis of new and existing microbiological, geochemical, and biogeochemical data that expands our view of the processes that regulate deep life in petroleum reservoir ecosystems and highlights interactions of a range of biotic and abiotic factors that determine whether petroleum is likely to be biodegraded in situ, with important consequences for oil exploration and production. Specifically we propose that the salinity of reservoir formation waters exerts a key control on the occurrence of biodegraded heavy oil reservoirs and introduce the concept of palaeopickling. We also evaluate the interaction between temperature and salinity to explain the occurrence of non-degraded oil in reservoirs where the temperature has not reached the 80-90°C required for palaeopasteurization. In addition we evaluate several hypotheses that might explain the occurrence of organisms conventionally considered to be aerobic, in nominally anoxic petroleum reservoir habitats. Finally we discuss the role of microbial processes for energy recovery as we make the transition from fossil fuel reliance, and how these fit within the broader socioeconomic landscape of energy futures.
在过去的十年中,我们对重油形成过程的理解发生了转变。过去认为这个过程是由雨水输送到深层油藏的氧气驱动的。这种观点已经被取代,现在认为这个过程是厌氧的,通常与产甲烷烃降解有关。储层的热历史对生物降解石油的存在起着根本的控制作用,微生物活动集中在油水过渡带的油柱底部,这是石油储层生物群落中的一个热点。在这里,我们综合了新的和现有的微生物学、地球化学和生物地球化学数据,扩大了我们对调节石油储层生态系统中深层生命过程的认识,并强调了一系列生物和非生物因素的相互作用,这些因素决定了石油是否有可能在原地生物降解,这对石油勘探和生产有重要影响。具体来说,我们提出储层地层水的盐度对生物降解重质油藏的存在起着关键的控制作用,并引入了古酸洗的概念。我们还评估了温度和盐度之间的相互作用,以解释在温度尚未达到 80-90°C 的情况下,储层中未降解石油的存在。此外,我们评估了几个假说,这些假说可能解释了通常被认为是需氧的生物在名义上缺氧的石油储层栖息地中的存在。最后,我们讨论了微生物过程在我们从对化石燃料的依赖过渡到能源回收中的作用,以及这些过程如何适应能源未来的更广泛的社会经济景观。