The Development of a Low-Shear Valve Suitable for Polymer Flooding

SPE Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (05) ◽  
pp. 2632-2647 ◽  
Author(s):  
Trygve Husveg ◽  
Mari Stokka ◽  
Rune Husveg ◽  
Stephane Jouenne

Summary Hydrolyzed polyacrylamides (HPAMs) are used as mobility-control agents to improve the macroscopic sweep efficiency of oil reservoirs. To maximize their viscosifying power, very-high-molecular-weight (MW) polymers are preferred, which in turn make them very sensitive to shear degradation. Shear degradation originates from chain stretching and breaking when the solution is subjected to a sudden acceleration. Fundamental development work is presented, where polymer degradation is studied in flow through reducers and expanders of various geometrical shapes, as well as through straight pipes and pipe coils of various diameters and lengths. The work also demonstrates that the creation of pressure drop through viscous pipe friction is very ineffective with regular tubes, most likely because of the drag-reducing effect of polymer. In addition, the arrangement of very long, straight, or coiled pipes in parallel is impractical and bulky. This paper further presents the development of a novel valve technology that solves these challenges. First, through the unique use of spiraling flow channels with optimally designed reducer and expansion zones, machined on the surface of disks, shear forces and thereby polymer degradation is controlled. Second, by arranging numerous such disks to form a disk stack, any target capacity can be met efficiently. Third, the disk-stack concept enables an easy and reliable plug-based solution for flow regulation and control. The performance of the new valve technology is demonstrated through small- and large-scale prototype tests. At very-shear-sensitive test conditions, it is demonstrated that polymer degradation of the new valve is less than 10% at 40- to 45-bar pressure drop, compared with 60 to 80% for a standard valve.

1975 ◽  
Vol 15 (04) ◽  
pp. 311-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.M. Maerker

Abstract Partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide solutions are highly shear degradable and may lose much of their effectiveness in reducing water mobility when sheared by flow through porous rock in the vicinity of an injection well. Degradation is investigated by forcing polymer solutions, prepared in brines of various salinities, through consolidated sandstone plugs differing in length and permeability, over a plugs differing in length and permeability, over a wide range of flow rates. A correlation for degradation based on a theoretical viscoelastic fluid model is developed that extends predictive capability to situations not easily reproduced in the laboratory. Mobility-reduction losses in field cores at reservoir flow rates are measured following degradation and are found to depend strongly on formation permeability. Consideration of field applications shows that injection into typical wellbore geometries can lead to more than an 80-percent loss of the mobility reduction provided by undegraded solutions. Also discussed are consequences for incremental oil recovery and the possibility of injecting through propped fractures. possibility of injecting through propped fractures Introduction Susceptibility of commercially available, partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamides to mechanical, or shear, degradation represents a serious problem regarding their applicability as mobility-control fluids for secondary and tertiary oil recovery applications. The approach taken in this work assumes that surface handling equipment in the field (pumps, flow controllers, etc.) have been adequately designed to minimize effects of shear degradation in all operations preceding actual delivery of the polymer solution to the sand face. The remaining problem is to assess the mechanical degradation a polymer solution experiences when it enters the porous matrix at the high fluxes prevailing around injection wells. Ability to predict the degree of mobility-control loss based on a laboratory investigation of the relevant parameters is desirable. White et al. were the first to attempt prediction of matrix-induced degradation, but the result was only a recommended injection-rate limit for minimizing polymer degradation for two specific wellbore completions. More recent papers offer limited data supporting the contention that matrix-induced degradation of polyacrylamide solutions results in significant loss polyacrylamide solutions results in significant loss of mobility control . This paper investigates the cause of mechanical degradation in dilute polymer solutions and presents experimental data on the effects of polymer concentration, water salinity, permeability, flow rate, and flow distance. permeability, flow rate, and flow distance. Several interesting and unexpected conclusions are drawn from the results. BACKGROUND - THEORETICAL CONCEPT The mechanical degradation of polymer solutions occurs when fluid stresses developed during deformation, or flow, become large enough to break the polymer molecular chains. Historically, the feeling has been that shearing stresses in laminar shear flow or turbulent pipe flow were responsible for chain scission. However, recent data reported by Culter et al. suggest that degradation of viscoelastic polymer solutions in capillary tubes may be dominated by large elongational or normal caresses occurring at the entrance to the squared-off capillaries. Such stresses result from Lagrangian unsteady flow, or elongational deformation, at the tube entrance. Flow through porous media also generates velocity fields that are sufficiently unsteady, in the Lagrangian sense, to lead one to anticipate large viscoelastic normal stresses. Viscoelastic fluids are materials that behave like viscous liquids at low rates of deformation and partially like elastic solids at high rates of partially like elastic solids at high rates of deformation. Several constitutive models are available for describing the stress-strain behavior of such fluids. SPEJ P. 311


2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark R. Kennedy ◽  
Raul Pacheco ◽  
John Van Doorn ◽  
Rommel Hipolito

Amplified nucleic acid diagnostics have brought extraordinarily powerful biochemical tools to bear on screening for and diagnosing infectious diseases. For example, current assays routinely permit the detection of 100 particles of human immunodeficiency virus or hepatitis C virus in one mL of blood. Such assays are used for screening the blood supply. To permit reliable automation of these complex and sensitive assays fluidic measurement and control systems are required. Such controls are needed to ensure that correct reagents are reliably dispensed into the reaction tubes. In this paper we will review the design and performance of a prototype Reagent Dispense Verification system for use on a fully-automated, amplified, nucleic acid diagnostic instrument. The system design utilizes hydraulic pressure drop and conductivity as the primary dispense parameters. In addition to the dispense verification function, the system provides a capacitive liquid level sensing function. The pipetting probe design and manufacturing process provide two conductive surfaces separated by an electrically insulating gap over which conductivity is measured. Hydraulic pressure drop is measured with an in-line, flow-through pressure transducer. The time-varying pressure and conductivity signals are used to classify each dispense operation as acceptable or not. Overall system performance data are presented demonstrating the viability of the design.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bradley Olson ◽  
Leonard Jason ◽  
Joseph R. Ferrari ◽  
Leon Venable ◽  
Bertel F. Williams ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 5449-5458
Author(s):  
A. Arokiaraj Jovith ◽  
S.V. Kasmir Raja ◽  
A. Razia Sulthana

Interference in Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) predominantly affects the performance of the WSN. Energy consumption in WSN is one of the greatest concerns in the current generation. This work presents an approach for interference measurement and interference mitigation in point to point network. The nodes are distributed in the network and interference is measured by grouping the nodes in the region of a specific diameter. Hence this approach is scalable and isextended to large scale WSN. Interference is measured in two stages. In the first stage, interference is overcome by allocating time slots to the node stations in Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) fashion. The node area is split into larger regions and smaller regions. The time slots are allocated to smaller regions in TDMA fashion. A TDMA based time slot allocation algorithm is proposed in this paper to enable reuse of timeslots with minimal interference between smaller regions. In the second stage, the network density and control parameter is introduced to reduce interference in a minor level within smaller node regions. The algorithm issimulated and the system is tested with varying control parameter. The node-level interference and the energy dissipation at nodes are captured by varying the node density of the network. The results indicate that the proposed approach measures the interference and mitigates with minimal energy consumption at nodes and with less overhead transmission.


2020 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 213-221
Author(s):  
C Birkett ◽  
R Lipscomb ◽  
T Moreland ◽  
T Leeds ◽  
JP Evenhuis

Flavobacterium columnare immersion challenges are affected by water-related environmental parameters and thus are difficult to reproduce. Whereas these challenges are typically conducted using flow-through systems, use of a recirculating challenge system to control environmental parameters may improve reproducibility. We compared mortality, bacterial concentration, and environmental parameters between flow-through and recirculating immersion challenge systems under laboratory conditions using 20 rainbow trout families. Despite identical dose concentration (1:75 dilution), duration of challenge, lot of fish, and temperature, average mortality in the recirculating system (42%) was lower (p < 0.01) compared to the flow-through system (77%), and there was low correlation (r = 0.24) of family mortality. Mean days to death (3.25 vs. 2.99 d) and aquaria-to-aquaria variation (9.6 vs. 10.4%) in the recirculating and flow-through systems, respectively, did not differ (p ≥ 0.30). Despite 10-fold lower water replacement rate in the recirculating (0.4 exchanges h-1) compared to flow-through system (4 exchanges h-1), differences in bacterial concentration between the 2 systems were modest (≤0.6 orders of magnitude) and inconsistent throughout the 21 d challenge. Compared to the flow-through system, dissolved oxygen during the 1 h exposure and pH were greater (p ≤ 0.02), and calcium and hardness were lower (p ≤ 0.03), in the recirculating system. Although this study was not designed to test effects of specific environmental parameters on mortality, it demonstrates that the cumulative effects of these parameters result in poor reproducibility. A recirculating immersion challenge model may be warranted to empirically identify and control environmental parameters affecting mortality and thus may serve as a more repeatable laboratory challenge model.


Author(s):  
Suman Debnath ◽  
Anirban Banik ◽  
Tarun Kanti Bandyopadhyay ◽  
Mrinmoy Majumder ◽  
Apu Kumar Saha

2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 491-502 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Mintu Sarkar ◽  
M. A. Rashid Sarkar ◽  
Mohammad Abdul Majid

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenhong Liu ◽  
Liejin Guo ◽  
Ximin Zhang ◽  
Kai Lin ◽  
Long Yang ◽  
...  

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