Injectivity Characteristics of EOR Polymers

2009 ◽  
Vol 12 (05) ◽  
pp. 783-792 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randall S. Seright ◽  
J. Mac Seheult ◽  
Todd Talashek

Summary For applications in which enhanced-oil-recovery (EOR) polymer solutions are injected, we estimate injectivity losses (relative to water injectivity) if fractures are not open. We also consider the degree of fracture extension that may occur if fractures are open. Three principal EOR polymer properties are examined that affect injectivity:debris in the polymer,polymer rheology in porous media, andpolymer mechanical degradation. An improved test was developed to measure the tendency of EOR polymers to plug porous media. The new test demonstrated that plugging tendencies varied considerably among both partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide (HPAM) and xanthan polymers. Rheology and mechanical degradation in porous media were quantified for a xanthan and an HPAM polymer. Consistent with previous work, we confirmed that xanthan solutions show pseudoplastic behavior in porous rock that closely parallels that in a viscometer. Xanthan was remarkably resistant to mechanical degradation, with a 0.1% xanthan solution (in seawater) experiencing only a 19% viscosity loss after flow through 102-md Berea sandstone at a pressure gradient of 24,600 psi/ft. For 0.1% HPAM in both 0.3% NaCl brine and seawater in 573-md Berea sandstone, Newtonian behavior was observed at low to moderate fluid fluxes, while pseudodilatant behavior was seen at moderate to high fluxes. No evidence of pseudoplastic behavior was seen in the porous rock, even though one solution exhibited a power-law index of 0.64 in a viscometer. For this HPAM in both brines, the onset of mechanical degradation occurred at a flux of 14 ft/d in 573-md Berea. Considering the polymer solutions investigated, satisfactory injection of more than 0.1 pore volume (PV) in field applications could only be expected for the cleanest polymers (i.e., that do not plug before 1,000 cm3/cm2 throughput), without inducing fractures (or formation parts for unconsolidated sands). Even in the absence of face plugging, the viscous nature of the solutions investigated requires that injectivity must be less than one-fifth that of water if formation parting is to be avoided (unless the injectant reduces the residual oil saturation and substantially increases the relative permeability to water). Since injectivity reductions of this magnitude are often economically unacceptable, fractures or fracture-like features are expected to open and extend significantly during the course of most polymer floods. Thus, an understanding of the orientation and growth of fractures may be crucial for EOR projects in which polymer solutions are injected. Introduction Maintaining mobility control is essential during chemical floods (polymer, surfactant, alkaline floods). Consequently, viscosification using water soluble polymers is usually needed during chemical EOR projects. Unfortunately, increased injectant viscosity could substantially reduce injectivity, slow fluid throughput, and delay oil production from flooded patterns. The objectives of this paper are to estimate injectivity losses associated with injection of polymer solutions if fractures are not open and to estimate the degree of fracture extension if fractures are open. We examine the three principal EOR polymer properties that affect injectivity:debris in the polymer,polymer rheology in porous media, andpolymer mechanical degradation. Although some reports suggest that polymer solutions can reduce the residual oil saturation below values expected for extensive waterflooding (and thereby increase the relative permeability to water), this effect is beyond the scope of this paper.

2011 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Taufiq Fathaddin ◽  
Asri Nugrahanti ◽  
Putri Nurizatulshira Buang ◽  
Khaled Abdalla Elraies

In this paper, simulation study was conducted to investigate the effect of spatial heterogeneity of multiple porosity fields on oil recovery, residual oil and microemulsion saturation. The generated porosity fields were applied into UTCHEM for simulating surfactant-polymer flooding in heterogeneous two-layered porous media. From the analysis, surfactant-polymer flooding was more sensitive than water flooding to the spatial distribution of multiple porosity fields. Residual oil saturation in upper and lower layers after water and polymer flooding was about the same with the reservoir heterogeneity. On the other hand, residual oil saturation in the two layers after surfactant-polymer flooding became more unequal as surfactant concentration increased. Surfactant-polymer flooding had higher oil recovery than water and polymer flooding within the range studied. The variation of oil recovery due to the reservoir heterogeneity was under 9.2%.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.T. Edwards ◽  
M.M. Honarpour ◽  
R.D. Hazlett ◽  
M. Cohen ◽  
A. Membere ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 15 (06) ◽  
pp. 706-711 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.. Feali ◽  
W.V.. V. Pinczewski ◽  
Y.. Cinar ◽  
C.H.. H. Arns ◽  
J.-Y.. -Y. Arns ◽  
...  

Summary It is now widely acknowledged that continuous oil-spreading films observed in 2D glass-micromodel studies for strongly water-wet three-phase oil, water, and gas systems are also present in real porous media, and they result in lower tertiary-gasflood residual oil saturations than for corresponding negative spreading systems that do not display oil-spreading behavior. However, it has not yet been possible to directly confirm the presence of continuous spreading films in real porous media in three dimensions, and little is understood of the distribution of the phases within the complex geometry and topology of actual porous media for different spreading conditions. This paper describes a study with high-resolution X-ray microtomography to image the distribution of oil, water, and gas after tertiary gasflooding to recover waterflood residual oil for two sets of fluids, one positive spreading and the other negative spreading, in strongly water-wet Bentheimer sandstone. We show that, for the positive spreading system, oil-spreading films maintain the connectivity of the oil phase down to low oil saturation. At similar oil saturation, no oil films are observed for the negative spreading system, and the oil phase is disconnected. The spatial continuity of the oil-spreading films over the imaged volume is confirmed by the computed Euler characteristic for the oil phase.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emad Waleed Al-Shalabi ◽  
Kamy Sepehrnoori ◽  
Gary Pope

Low salinity water injection (LSWI) is gaining popularity as an improved oil recovery technique in both secondary and tertiary injection modes. The objective of this paper is to investigate the main mechanisms behind the LSWI effect on oil recovery from carbonates through history-matching of a recently published coreflood. This paper includes a description of the seawater cycle match and two proposed methods to history-match the LSWI cycles using the UTCHEM simulator. The sensitivity of residual oil saturation, capillary pressure curve, and relative permeability parameters (endpoints and Corey’s exponents) on LSWI is evaluated in this work. Results showed that wettability alteration is still believed to be the main contributor to the LSWI effect on oil recovery in carbonates through successfully history matching both oil recovery and pressure drop data. Moreover, tuning residual oil saturation and relative permeability parameters including endpoints and exponents is essential for a good data match. Also, the incremental oil recovery obtained by LSWI is mainly controlled by oil relative permeability parameters rather than water relative permeability parameters. The findings of this paper help to gain more insight into this uncertain IOR technique and propose a mechanistic model for oil recovery predictions.


1975 ◽  
Vol 15 (05) ◽  
pp. 376-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.M. Weinbrandt ◽  
H.J. Ramey ◽  
F.J. Casse

MEMBERS SPE-AIME Abstract Equipment was constructed to perform dynamic displacement experiments on small core samples under conditions of elevated temperature. Oil-water flowing fraction and pressure drop were recorded continuously for calculation of both the relative permeability ratio and the individual relative permeability ratio and the individual relative permeabilities. Imbibition relative permeabilities permeabilities. Imbibition relative permeabilities were measured for five samples of Boise sandstone at room temperature and at 175deg.F. The fluids used were distilled water and a white mineral oil. The effect of temperature on absolute permeability was investigated for six Boise sandstone samples and two Berea sandstone samples. Results for all samples were similar. The irreducible water saturation increased significantly, while the residual oil saturation decreased significantly with temperature increase. The individual relative permeability to oil increased for all water saturations below the room-temperature residual oil saturation, but the relative permeability to water at flood-out increased with permeability to water at flood-out increased with temperature increase. Absolute permeability decreased with temperature increase. Introduction Test environment is generally acknowledged to have a significant effect on measurement of relative permeability. The environment consists not only permeability. The environment consists not only of the temperature and pressure, but also of the fluids used and the core condition. Several workers have used the approach of completely simulating the reservoir conditions in the laboratory experiment. Such methods are termed "restored state." Restored state data are generally different from "room condition" data; since several variables are involved, it is difficult to determine the importance of each variable. Another approach used attributes the changes in relative permeability to changes in the rock-fluid interaction or wettability. Wettability, however, depends on many variables. Specifically, wettability depends on the composition of the rock surface, the composition of the fluids, the saturation history of the rock surface, and the temperature and pressure of the system. The purpose of this study is to isolate temperature as a variable in the relative permeability of a given rock-fluid system. Work on isolation of temperature as a variable in relative permeability has been conducted since the early 1960s. Edmondsons established results in 1965 for a Berea sandstone core using both water/refined oil and water/crude oil as fluid pairs. He showed a change in the relative permeability ratio accompanied by a decrease in the residual oil saturation with temperature increase. Edmondson showed no data for water saturations below 40 percent, and his curves show considerable scatter in the middle saturation ranges. Edmondson's work was the only study to use consolidated cores to investigate the effect of temperature on relative permeability measurements. Poston et al. presented waterflood data for sand packs containing 80-, 99-, a nd 600-cp oil, and packs containing 80-, 99-, a nd 600-cp oil, and observed an increase in the individual relative permeabilities with temperature increase. The permeabilities with temperature increase. The increase in the oil and the water permeability was accompanied by an increase in irreducible water saturation and a decrease in the residual oil saturation with temperature increase. Poston et al. was the only work to present individual oil and water permeability. Davidsons presented results for displacement of No. 15 white oil from a sand pack by distilled water, steam, or nitrogen. However, he found little permeability-ratio dependence in the middle permeability-ratio dependence in the middle saturation ranges. Davidson, too, found a decrease in the residual oil saturation with temperature increase, but he did not include data on irreducible water saturation. SPEJ P. 376


Author(s):  
Muhammad Taufiq Fathaddin ◽  
Kartika Fajarwati Hartono ◽  
Trijana Kartoatmodjo

<em>In this paper, a numerical study was conducted to investigate the effect of spatial heterogeneity of multiple porosity fields on oil recovery, residual oil saturation,   polymer retained, and polymer adsorption. The generated porosity fields were applied to UTCHEM for simulating polymer and water flooding in heterogeneous two-layered porous media. From the analysis, the increase of reservoir heterogeneity resulted in higher polymer retention and lower polymer adsorption. In general, polymer flooding results in more balance residual oil saturation in the upper and lower layer than water flooding. This indicated that the vertical sweep efficiency of polymer flooding was better than water flooding. Residual oil saturation ratio between layers after water or polymer flooding was about equal along with the increase of reservoir heterogeneity. Spatial heterogeneity of multiple porosity fields had only a small effect on recovery factor. The variation of the recovery factor of polymer and water flooding due to the reservoir heterogeneity was under 1%</em>.


2014 ◽  
Vol 887-888 ◽  
pp. 53-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen Chao Jiang ◽  
Jian Zhang ◽  
Kao Ping Song ◽  
En Gao Tang ◽  
Bin Huang

Different kinds of compound solutions were prepared by using different concentrations of hydrophobically associating polymers and sulfonate type surfactant. The static viscosity and interfacial tension of these solutions were measured. On the experimental conditions of the Suizhong 36-1 oilfield, the relative permeability curves of the water flooding and the surfactant/polymer combination flooding were measured through the constant speed unsteady method and the experimental data were processed through the way of J.B.N. The several existing kinds of viscosity processing methods of non-newtonian fluid were compared and analysed , and a new way is put forward . The results show that the relative permeability of the flooding phase is very low while displacing the heavy oil; the relative permeability of oil in combination flooding is higher than that in water flooding, the relative permeability of flooding phase in combination flooding is lower than that in water flooding and the residual oil saturation of combination flooding is lower than that of water flooding. Meanwhile, the concentrations of polymer and surfactant have a great influence on the surfactant/polymer combination relative permeability curves.


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