Steamflood With Vertical Injectors and Horizontal Producers in Multiple Zones

2011 ◽  
Vol 14 (02) ◽  
pp. 161-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanjeev Malik ◽  
Y.M.. M. Zhang ◽  
Mohammed Al Asimi ◽  
Thomas L. Gould

Summary The Mukhaizna heavy-oil field in the Sultanate of Oman desert has three distinct zones that require steam injection to enhance oil recovery. A new, geocellular-based reservoir description was prepared to evaluate the steamflood performance of these three zones using different horizontal- and vertical-well configurations. On the basis of the results of thermal simulations, the final design called for vertical wells injecting steam into all three zones, with three stacked horizontal production (HP) wells, one for each zone. One advantage of this design is the ability to control the steam flux from each vertical injector (VI) into each zone to mitigate early steam breakthrough and optimize recovery. After 2 years of steam injection, oil production is tracking the thermal model nicely.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Reham Al-Jabri ◽  
Rouhollah Farajzadeh ◽  
Abdullah Alkindi ◽  
Rifaat Al-Mjeni ◽  
David Rousseau ◽  
...  

Abstract Heavy oil reservoirs remain challenging for surfactant-based EOR. In particular, selecting fine-tuned and cost effective chemical formulations requires extensive laboratory work and a solid methodology. This paper reports a laboratory feasibility study, aiming at designing a surfactant-polymer pilot for a heavy oil field with an oil viscosity of ~500cP in the South of Sultanate of Oman, where polymer flooding has already been successfully trialed. A major driver was to design a simple chemical EOR method, to minimize the risk of operational issues (e.g. scaling) and ensure smooth logistics on the field. To that end, a dedicated alkaline-free and solvent-free surfactant polymer (SP) formulation has been designed, with its sole three components, polymer, surfactant and co-surfactant, being readily available industrial chemicals. This part of the work has been reported in a previous paper. A comprehensive set of oil recovery coreflood tests has then been carried out with two objectives: validate the intrinsic performances of the SP formulation in terms of residual oil mobilization and establish an optimal injection strategy to maximize oil recovery with minimal surfactant dosage. The 10 coreflood tests performed involved: Bentheimer sandstone, for baseline assessments on large plugs with minimized experimental uncertainties; homogeneous artificial sand and clays granular packs built to have representative mineralogical composition, for tuning of the injection parameters; native reservoir rock plugs, unstacked in order to avoid any bias, to validate the injection strategy in fully representative conditions. All surfactant injections were performed after long polymer injections, to mimic the operational conditions in the field. Under injection of "infinite" slugs of the SP formulation, all tests have led to tertiary recoveries of more than 88% of the remaining oil after waterflood with final oil saturations of less than 5%. When short slugs of SP formulation were injected, tertiary recoveries were larger than 70% ROIP with final oil saturations less than 10%. The final optimized test on a reservoir rock plug, which was selected after an extensive review of the petrophysical and mineralogical properties of the available reservoir cores, led to a tertiary recovery of 90% ROIP with a final oil saturation of 2%, after injection of 0.35 PV of SP formulation at 6 g/L total surfactant concentration, with surfactant losses of 0.14 mg-surfactant/g(rock). Further optimization will allow accelerating oil bank arrival and reducing the large PV of chase polymer needed to mobilize the liberated oil. An additional part of the work consisted in generating the parameters needed for reservoir scale simulation. This required dedicated laboratory assays and history matching simulations of which the results are presented and discussed. These outcomes validate, at lab scale, the feasibility of a surfactant polymer process for the heavy oil field investigated. As there has been no published field test of SP injection in heavy oil, this work may also open the way to a new range of field applications.


2014 ◽  
Vol 962-965 ◽  
pp. 461-464
Author(s):  
Ping Yuan

In the later waterflooding sandstone reservoir, there are many serious development contradictions, especially in the aspects of water breakthrough and heterogeneous development. Based on the laboratory experiments, numerical simulation research on historical match of the low temperature oxidation kinetics model, the injection mode, foaming agent concentration, gas to liquid ratio, steam injection rate and other key parameters of air-foam flooding were carried out. The results show that, air foam flooding technology integrated comprehensive effect of low-temperature oxidation, air flooding and foam flooding, which enhance oil recovery nearly 8% by block the thief layer effectively and improving the swept volume. Air-foam flooding technology also can reduce the amount of water injection and water production, which improved the utilization rate of water resources and reduced output liquid processing cost. This technology shows its broad prospect of application and can provide reference for similar reservoirs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-44
Author(s):  
Ayat Ahmed Jassim ◽  
Abdul Aali Al-dabaj ◽  
Aqeel S. AL-Adili

The water injection of the most important technologies to increase oil production from petroleum reservoirs. In this research, we developed a model for oil tank using the software RUBIS for reservoir simulation. This model was used to make comparison in the production of oil and the reservoir pressure for two case studies where the water was not injected in the first case study but adding new vertical wells while, later, it was injected in the second case study. It represents the results of this work that if the water is not injected, the reservoir model that has been upgraded can produce only 2.9% of the original oil in the tank. This case study also represents a drop in reservoir pressure, which was not enough to support oil production. Thus, the implementation of water injection in the second case study of the average reservoir pressure may support, which led to an increase in oil production by up to 5.5% of the original oil in the tank. so that, the use of water injection is a useful way to increase oil production. Therefore, many of the issues related to this subject valuable of study where the development of new ideas and techniques.


2018 ◽  
Vol 785 ◽  
pp. 146-152
Author(s):  
Vadim Aleksandrov ◽  
Marsel Kadyrov ◽  
Alexander Markov ◽  
Vadim Golozubenko ◽  
Sergey Aleksandrov

To increase the development efficiency of reservoirs, methods to intensify inflows and enhance oil recovery are applied. The geological and field experience of applying these methods shows that a high technological effect can be reached in specific geological and geophysical conditions while in other conditions efficiency will be insignificant. In this relation, an important solution for this problem is the justification of selecting the most efficient technologies of stimulating pay zones. The research objective is to select the most optimal technologies of stimulating pay zones to increase the development scope and enhance oil recovery. Using geological and field analysis, a complex quantitative assessment was done for the efficiency of using methods to enhance oil recovery and stimulate pay zones in both production and injection wells.


Author(s):  
Omid Arjmand ◽  
Jalal Foroozesh ◽  
Ali Reza Roostaee ◽  
Shahaboddin Ayatollahi

A chemical Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) process receives more attentions nowadays. Crude Terephthalic Acid (CTA) as a chemical compound is used for flooding here as an alternative to the traditional hydrolyzed polyacryl amide (HPAM). Crude Oil samples from an Iranian oil field were used during the flooding tests. Sand packed models using two different sizes of sand mainly 50 and 100 meshes were employed in this investigation. A comparison between water flooding and CTA flooding as a secondary oil recovery process revealed that the recovery was improved by 10% when CTA was used. The effect of various injection rates and different concentration of chemical solutions on the recovery factor have been checked. Besides, experimental results improved the surfactant behavior of the CTA solution in water. Moreover, at tertiary state, Sodium Dodocyl Sulfate (SDS) as an anionic surfactant was flooded. Experiments showed that recovery factor increased by 5% OOIP while using SDS.


2014 ◽  
Vol 675-677 ◽  
pp. 1530-1534
Author(s):  
Biao Li ◽  
Hong Zhang

SZ 36-1 oilfield has entered high water cut stage, and thus research on the distribution of oil is important for tapping potential in oilfield. In this paper, the distribution of residual oil of SZ 36-1 oilfield was discussed by fine reservoir description and dynamic analysis. The saturation of residual oil at faults, “died oil” between two well, the top of positive rhythm sand body and low (no) permeability interlayer is higher than other situations. We point out that infilling adjustment wells, increasing the oil well productivity and structure adjustment of produced liquid are efficient measures to enhance oil recovery for SZ 36-1 oilfield .


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