Impact of Oil Saturation, CO2 Evolution, and Rock Wettability on Acid Efficiencies During Carbonate Acidizing: A Three-Phase Perspective

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harish T. Kumar ◽  
Sajjaat Muhemmed ◽  
Hisham A. Nasr-El-Din
SPE Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-26
Author(s):  
Sajjaat Muhemmed ◽  
Harish Kumar ◽  
Nicklaus Cairns ◽  
Hisham A. Nasr-El-Din

Summary Limited studies have been conducted in understanding the mechanics of preflush stages in sandstone-acidizing processes. Among those conducted in this area, all efforts have been directed toward singular aqueous-phase scenarios. Encountering 100% water saturation (Sw) in the near-wellbore region is seldom the case because hydrocarbons at residual or higher saturations can exist. Carbonate-mineral dissolution, being the primary objective of the preflush stage, results in carbon dioxide (CO2) evolution. This can lead to a multiphase presence depending on the conditions in the porous medium, and this factor has been unaccounted for in previous studies under the assumption that all the evolved CO2 is dissolved in the surrounding solutions. The performance of a preflush stage changes in the presence of multiphase environments in the porous media. A detailed study is presented on the effects of evolved CO2 caused by carbonate-mineral dissolution, and its ensuing activity during the preflush stages in matrix acidizing of sandstone reservoirs. Four Carbon Tan Sandstone cores were used toward the purpose of this study, of which two were fully water saturated and the remaining two were brought to initial water saturation (Swi) and residual oil saturation to waterfloods (Sorw) before conducting preflush-stage experiments. The preflush-stage fluid, 15 wt% hydrochloric acid (HCl), was injected in the concerning cores while maintaining initial pore pressures of 1,200 psi and constant temperatures of 150°F. A three-phase-flow numerical-simulation model coupled with chemical-reaction and structure-property modeling features is used to validate the conducted preflush-stage coreflood experiments. Initially, the cores are scanned using computed tomography (CT) to accurately characterize the initial porosity distributions across the cores. The carbonate minerals present in the cores, namely calcite and dolomite, are quantified experimentally using X-ray diffraction (XRD). These measured porosity distributions and mineral concentrations are populated across the core-representative models. The coreflood effluents’ calcium chloride and magnesium chloride, which are acid/carbonate-mineral-reaction products, as well as spent-HCl concentrations were measured. The pressure drop across the cores was logged during the tests. These parameters from all the conducted coreflood tests were used for history matching using the numerical model. The calibrated numerical model was then used to understand the physics involved in this complex subsurface process. In fully water-saturated cores, a major fraction of unreacted carbonate minerals still existed even after 40 pore volumes (PV) of preflush acid injection. Heterogeneity is induced as carbonate-mineral dissolution progresses within the core, creating paths of least resistance, leading to the preferential flow of the incoming fresh acid. This leads to regions of carbonate minerals being untouched during the preflush stimulation stage. A power-law trend, P = aQb, is observed between the stabilized pressure drops at each sequential acid-injection rate vs. the injection rates, where P is the pressure drop across the core, Q is the sequential flow rate, and a and b are constants, with b < 1. An ideal maximum injection rate can be deduced to optimize the preflush stage toward efficient carbonate-mineral dissolution in the damaged zone. An average of 25% recovery of the oil in place (OIP) was seen from preflush experiments conducted on cores with Sorw. In cores with Swi, the oil saturation was reduced during the preflush stage to a similar value as in the cores with Sorw. The oil-phase-viscosity reduction caused by CO2 dissolution in oil and the increase in saturation and permeability to the oil phase resulting from oil swelling by CO2 are inferred as the main mechanisms for any additional oil production beyond residual conditions during the preflush stage. The potential of evolved CO2, a byproduct of the sandstone-acidizing preflush stage, toward its contribution in swelling the surrounding oil, lowering its viscosity, and thus mobilizing the trapped oil has been depicted in this study


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.


10.2118/90-pa ◽  
1961 ◽  
Vol 1 (04) ◽  
pp. 254-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Naar ◽  
R.J. Wygal

Abstract An equation for three-phase (water, oil, gas) imbibition oil permeability is developed, assuming the water to be the dominant wetting fluid. Oil isoperms are obtained for consolidated sandstones characterized by. The evolution of an oil-gas system imbibing water from is shown to proceed along a line of constant oil saturation with increasing oil permeability and decreasing gas saturations. When the gas saturation cannot be reduced further, the system evolves along a line of constant with decreasing oil saturation and permeability. The initial gas saturation is shown to reduce markedly the effect of complete wetting by either oil or water on flow performance. Introduction Imbibition oil isoperms are required for performance prediction when a well is producing water, oil and gas. This situation occurs in multiphase displacements such as underground combustion, steam injection and the water flooding of highly depleted reservoirs. In a recent paper, a model was presented for the prediction of two-phase imbibition characteristics. This paper extends the imbibition model to the case of three phases by assuming that the water is the dominant wetting fluid. The following results were obtained from the model:an analytical expression of oil isoperms;oil isoperms as functions of reduced water, oil and gas saturations, valid for all sandstones having a capillary pressure curve which can be approximated by; andevaluation of the three-phase flow performance as dictated by complete wetting by either oil or water. The agreement between predicted and observed oil recovery in the presence of a gas phase, reported in Ref. 1, is a partial support for the present development. However, experimental data are not available at this time to check fully the model predictions. Perhaps this paper will stimulate the collection of such data. THEORETICAL The imbibition model of a porous medium has been described previously, and the reader is referred to the paper of Naar and Henderson for details. In brief, the model is formed by the random interconnection of straight capillaries, with a provision for the blocking of the non-wetting phase by the invading wetting fluid.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Subodh Gupta

Abstract The objective of this paper is to present a fundamentals-based, consistent with observation, three-phase flow model that avoids the pitfalls of conventional models such as Stone-II or Baker's three-phase permeability models. While investigating the myth of residual oil saturation in SAGD with comparing model generated results against field data, Gupta et al. (2020) highlighted the difficulty in matching observed residual oil saturation in steamed reservoir with Stone-II and Baker's linear models. Though the use of Stone-II model is very popular for three-phase flow across the industry, one issue in the context of gravity drainage is how it appears to counter-intuitively limit the flow of oil when water is present near its irreducible saturation. The current work begins with describing the problem with existing combinatorial methods such as Stone-II, which in turn combine the water-oil, and gas-oil relative permeability curves to yield the oil relative permeability curve in presence of water and gas. Then starting with the fundamentals of laminar flow in capillaries and with successive analogical formulations, it develops expressions that directly yield the relative permeabilities for all three phases. In this it assumes a pore size distribution approximated by functions used earlier in the literature for deriving two-phase relative permeability curves. The outlined approach by-passes the need for having combinatorial functions such as prescribed by Stone or Baker. The model so developed is simple to use, and it avoids the unnatural phenomenon or discrepancy due to a mathematical artefact described in the context of Stone-II above. The model also explains why in the past some researchers have found relative permeability to be a function of temperature. The new model is also amenable to be determined experimentally, instead of being based on an assumed pore-size distribution. In that context it serves as a set of skeletal functions of known dependencies on various saturations, leaving constants to be determined experimentally. The novelty of the work is in development of a three-phase relative permeability model that is based on fundamentals of flow in fine channels and which explains the observed results in the context of flow in porous media better. The significance of the work includes, aside from predicting results more in line with expectations and an explanation of temperature dependent relative permeabilities of oil, a more reliable time dependent residual oleic-phase saturation in the context of gravity-based oil recovery methods.


SPE Journal ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (03) ◽  
pp. 969-984 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rahul Kumar ◽  
Jia He ◽  
Mohammed Bataweel ◽  
Hisham Nasr-El-Din

Summary The optimal injection rate for wormhole propagation and face dissolution at low injection rates during carbonate matrix acidizing is well-established. However, little research is documented on the subject of how the presence of oil affects this process. This study demonstrates the impact of oil saturation on wormhole characteristics while acidizing reservoir and outcrop cores under reservoir conditions (200°F). Coreflood experiments at flow rates ranging from 0.5 to 20 cm3/min were performed to determine the optimal acid-injection rate for wormhole propagation when acidizing homogeneous limestone reservoir cores, low-permeability Indiana limestone cores, and homogeneous dolomite cores with dimensions of a 3- and 6-in. length and a 1.5-in. diameter. The experimental work involved acidizing cores saturated with water, oil, and waterflood residual oil by use of 15-wt% regular hydrochloric acid (HCl). The viscosity of the crude oil used was 3.8 cp at 200°F. Computed-chromatography (CT) scans enabled the characterization of wormholes through the cores. The concentrations of the calcium and magnesium ions in core effluent samples were measured with inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES), and the effluent samples were titrated to determine the concentration of the acid. At injection rates of 0.5 to 20 cm3/min, 15-wt% HCl was effective in creating wormholes with minimal branches for cores with residual oil saturation (ROS). Compared with brine- and oil-saturated cores, those at ROS took less acid volume to breakthrough. In addition, the efficiency of regular acid improved with increased acid-injection rates in the presence of residual oil. A decrease in the acid pore volume (PV) to breakthrough for oil-saturated cores was observed at high acid-injection rates, which could be attributed to viscous fingering of acid through oil. Unlike brine-saturated and oil-saturated cores, cores at ROS showed no face dissolution at low acid-injection rates. The conclusions of this work highlight the impact of oil saturation on matrix characteristics while acidizing carbonate rocks.


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