ELSEVIER Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 72 (1996) 101-120
JOurnal of volcanology
and geothennal research
Role of permeability versus temperature in the distribution of the
fine ( < 0.2 f.Lm) clay fraction in the Chipilapa geothermal system
(EI Salvador, Central America)
P. Patrier a, *, P. Papapanagiotou b,c, D. Beaufort b, H. Traineau \ H. Bril d,b, 1. Rojas e
a E.R.M., Merovee Place de l'Eglise, 86320 Civaux, France
b Universite de Poitiers, U.R.A. 721 C.N.R.S. "Argiles, Sols et Alterations", 40 Avenue du Recteur Pineau, 86022 Poitiers Cedex, France
C Bureau de Recherches Geologiques et Mini'eres, B.P. 6009, 45060 Orleans Cedex 2, France
Abstract
d Laboratoire de Geologie, Universite de Limoges, 123 Avenue Albert Thomas, 87060 Limoges Cedex, France
e Empresa Nacional del Petroleo, Ahumada 341, Santiago, Chile
Received 17 April 1994; accepted 24 October 1995
Detailed X-ray diffraction of clay minerals from the less than 0.2 11m fraction of altered rocks has been carried out On
cuttings and cores from three boreholes (CH7, CH9 and CH7B) from the geothennal field of Chipilapa (El Salvador, Central
America). In most of the low-permeable horizons, the vertical distribution of l/S and CIS mixed-layers fairly agrees with
the general scheme of di-smectite to illite and tri-smectite to chlorite conversion series with increasing depth (max. 2600 m)
and temperature (max. 220°C). The deepest parts of the wells are characterized by chlorite and illite-rich illite/smectite
mixed-layers (l/S R 2: 1) in close agreement with the measured temperature (170-220°C). Within fracture-controlled
permeable horizons, the distribution of clay minerals strongly disagrees with the "classical pattern" of di-smectite to illite
and tri-smectite to chlorite conversions observed in low-permeable horizons. Great amounts of smectites and/or smectite-rich
mixed-layers occur at temperatures which strongly exceed the current range of smectite stability in natural systems (up to
205°C). Similar discrepancies may also be viewed from chlorite crystallinity in well CH9 and smectite content in
smectite-rich chlorite/smectite mixed-layers in well CH7B. These high-temperature smectites are considered as present or
very recent metastable phases representing the first step of kinetically controlled conversion series toward illite and/or
chlorite. Such phenomena are restricted to the levels in which the present hydrodynamic conditions promote the
crystallization process: boiling and mixing of fluids with contrasting temperatures. High-temperature smectites and
smectite-rich mixed-layers may be of great interest for the understanding of the very recent evolution of geothermal
reservoirs. They do not only indicate the present horizons of active fluid circulations in geothermal wells (smectite coatings
at the wall of fractures), but they are also potential guides in the determination of the horizons in which permeability has
recently decreased.
, Corresponding author.
1. Introduction
Alteration assemblages in hydrothermal systems
have received considerable attention during the last
twenty years. From a prospecting point of view,
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