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    The Geology of Steatization (In continuation of primordial kerogen, being hydrogen enhanced and brought to the surface)
    September 25, 2020
    The Geology of Mud Volcanism
    September 25, 2020

    The Geology of Diamondoids (from mantle to brine component, lower to mid-crust)

    By: Magma Chem Research Institute

    $50.00

    Where did the diamondoids in oil come from? In the early 2000s, diamondoid hydrocarbons were discovered in bituminous pipe scales in Louisiana pipelines. Diamond compounds have a diamond structure identical to those that classically occurs in high-temperature, high-pressure, kimberlite pipes. Subsequent research has shown that diamondoids are present in almost every oil. Hydrous pyrolysis experiments have shown that diamondoid formation is maximized in California oils at 375-475° oC. These high-temperature compounds are highly anomalous to the conventional oil model. The conventional model typically interprets these compounds as a highly refractory indicator leftover from ultimate oil maturation. In contrast, the UDH model interprets these high-temperature hydrocarbons as the beginning of the hydrothermal oil process, not the end of the hydrocarbon degradation process.

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    Description

    Where did the diamondoids in oil come from? In the early 2000s, diamondoid hydrocarbons were discovered in bituminous pipe scales in Louisiana pipelines. Diamond compounds have a diamond structure identical to those that classically occurs in high-temperature, high-pressure, kimberlite pipes. Subsequent research has shown that diamondoids are present in almost every oil. Hydrous pyrolysis experiments have shown that diamondoid formation is maximized in California oils at 375-475° oC. These high-temperature compounds are highly anomalous to the conventional oil model. The conventional model typically interprets these compounds as a highly refractory indicator leftover from ultimate oil maturation. In contrast, the UDH model interprets these high-temperature hydrocarbons as the beginning of the hydrothermal oil process, not the end of the hydrocarbon degradation process.

    Product details

    Where did the diamondoids in oil come from? In the early 2000s, diamondoid hydrocarbons were discovered in bituminous pipe scales in Louisiana pipelines. Diamond compounds have a diamond structure identical to those that classically occurs in high-temperature, high-pressure, kimberlite pipes. Subsequent research has shown that diamondoids are present in almost every oil. Hydrous pyrolysis experiments have shown that diamondoid formation is maximized in California oils at 375-475° oC. These high-temperature compounds are highly anomalous to the conventional oil model. The conventional model typically interprets these compounds as a highly refractory indicator leftover from ultimate oil maturation. In contrast, the UDH model interprets these high-temperature hydrocarbons as the beginning of the hydrothermal oil process, not the end of the hydrocarbon degradation process.

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