Formation Damage Due to Scale Formation in Porous Media Resulting From Water Injection

Author(s):  
J. Moghadasi ◽  
M. Jamialahmadi ◽  
H. Müller-Steinhagen ◽  
A. Sharif
1991 ◽  
Vol 108 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
SUNIL D. REGE ◽  
H. SCOTT FOGLER

SPE Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (01) ◽  
pp. 01-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Omid Mohammadzadeh ◽  
Shawn David Taylor ◽  
Dmitry Eskin ◽  
John Ratulowski

Summary One of the complex processes of permeability impairment in porous media, especially in the near-wellbore region, is asphaltene-induced formation damage. During production, asphaltene particles precipitate out of the bulk fluid phase because of pressure drop, which might result in permeability reduction caused by both deposition of asphaltene nanoparticles on porous-medium surfaces and clogging of pore throats by larger asphaltene agglomerates. Experimental data will be used to identify the parameters of an impairment model being developed. As part of a larger effort to identify key mechanisms of asphaltene deposition in porous media and develop a model for asphaltene impairment by pressure depletion, this paper focuses on a systematic design and execution of an experimental study of asphaltene-related permeability damage caused by live-oil depressurization along the length of a flow system. An experiment was performed using a custom-designed 60-ft slimtube-coil assembly packed with silica sands to a permeability of 55 md. The customized design included a number of pressure gauges at regular intervals along the coil length, which enabled real-time measurement of the fluid-pressure profile across the full length of the slimtube coil. The test was performed on a well-characterized recombined live oil from the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) that is a known problematic asphaltenic oil. Under a constant differential pressure, the injection flow rate of the live oil through the slimtube coil decreased over time as the porous medium became impaired. During the impairment stage, samples of the produced oil were collected on a regular basis for asphaltene-content measurement. After more than 1 month, the impairment test was terminated; the live oil was purged from the slimtube coil with helium at a pressure above the asphaltene-onset pressure (AOP); and the entire system was gently depressurized to bring the coil to atmospheric conditions while preserving the asphaltene-damaged zones of the coil. The permeability and porosity of the porous medium changed because of asphaltene impairment that was triggered by pressure depletion. Results indicated that the coil permeability was impaired by approximately 32% because of pressure depletion below the AOP, with most of the damage occurring in the latter section of the tube, which operated entirely below the AOP. Post-analytical studies indicated lower asphaltene content of the produced-oil samples compared with the injecting fluid. The distribution of asphaltene deposits along the length of the coil was determined by cutting the slimtube coil into 2- to 3-ft-long sections and using solvent extraction to collect the asphaltenes in each section. The extraction results confirmed that the observed permeability impairment was indeed caused by asphaltene deposition in the middle and latter sections of the coil, where the pressure was less than the AOP. With the success of this experiment, the same detailed analysis can be extended to a series of experiments to determine the effects of different key parameters on pressure-induced asphaltene impairment, including flow rate, wettability, and permeability.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (21) ◽  
pp. 7415
Author(s):  
Ilyas Khurshid ◽  
Imran Afgan

The main challenge in extracting geothermal energy is to overcome issues relating to geothermal reservoirs such as the formation damage and formation fracturing. The objective of this study is to develop an integrated framework that considers the geochemical and geomechanics aspects of a reservoir and characterizes various formation damages such as impairment of formation porosity and permeability, hydraulic fracturing, lowering of formation breakdown pressure, and the associated heat recovery. In this research study, various shallow, deep and high temperature geothermal reservoirs with different formation water compositions were simulated to predict the severity/challenges during water injection in hot geothermal reservoirs. The developed model solves various geochemical reactions and processes that take place during water injection in geothermal reservoirs. The results obtained were then used to investigate the geomechanics aspect of cold-water injection. Our findings presented that the formation temperature, injected water temperature, the concentration of sulfate in the injected water, and its dilution have a noticeable impact on rock dissolution and precipitation. In addition, anhydrite precipitation has a controlling effect on permeability impairment in the investigated case study. It was observed that the dilution of water could decrease formation of scale while the injection of sulfate rich water could intensify scale precipitation. Thus, the reservoir permeability could decrease to a critical level, where the production of hot water reduces and the generation of geothermal energy no longer remains economical. It evident that injection of incompatible water would decrease the formation porosity. Thus, the geomechanics investigation was performed to determine the effect of porosity decrease. It was found that for the 50% porosity reduction case, the initial formation breakdown pressure reduced from 2588 psi to 2586 psi, and for the 75% porosity reduction case it decreased to 2584 psi. Thus, geochemical based formation damage is significant but geomechanics based formation fracturing is insignificant in the selected case study. We propose that water composition should be designed to minimize damage and that high water injection pressures in shallow reservoirs should be avoided.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 339
Author(s):  
I. Carneiro ◽  
M. Borges ◽  
S. Malta

In this work,we present three-dimensional numerical simulations of water-oil flow in porous media in order to analyze the influence of the heterogeneities in the porosity and permeability fields and, mainly, their relationships upon the phenomenon known in the literature as viscous fingering. For this, typical scenarios of heterogeneous reservoirs submitted to water injection (secondary recovery method) are considered. The results show that the porosity heterogeneities have a markable influence in the flow behavior when the permeability is closely related with porosity, for example, by the Kozeny-Carman (KC) relation.This kind of positive relation leads to a larger oil recovery, as the areas of high permeability(higher flow velocities) are associated with areas of high porosity (higher volume of pores), causing a delay in the breakthrough time. On the other hand, when both fields (porosity and permeability) are heterogeneous but independent of each other the influence of the porosity heterogeneities is smaller and may be negligible.


SPE Journal ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Xin Su ◽  
Rouzbeh G. Moghanloo ◽  
Minhui Qi ◽  
Xiang-an Yue

Summary Formation damage mechanisms in general lower the quality of the near wellbore, often manifested in the form of permeability reduction, and thus reducing the productivity of production wells and injectivity of injection wells. Asphaltene deposition, as one of the important causes, can trigger serious formation damage issues and significantly restrict the production capacity of oil wells. Several mechanisms acting simultaneously contribute to the complexity associated with prediction of permeability impairment owing to asphaltene deposition; thus, integration of modeling efforts for asphaltene aggregation and deposition mechanisms seems inevitable for improved predictability. In this work, an integrated simulation approach is proposed to predict permeability impairment in porous medium. The proposed approach is novel because it integrates various mathematical models to study permeability impairment considering porosity reduction, particle aggregation, and pore connectivity loss caused by asphaltene deposition. To improve the accuracy of simulation results, porous media is considered as a bundle (different size) of capillary tubes with dynamic interconnectivity. The total volume change of interconnected tubes will directly represent permeability reduction realized in porous media. The prediction of asphaltene deposition in porous media is improved in this paper via integration of the particle aggregation model into calculation. The simulation results were verified by comparing with existing experimental data sets. After that, a sensitivity analysis was performed to study parameters that affect permeability impairment. The simulation results show that our permeability impairment model—considering asphaltene deposition, aggregation, and pore connectivity loss—can accurately reproduce the experimental results with fewer fitting or empirical parameters needed. The sensitivity analysis shows that longer aggregation time, higher flow velocity, and bigger precipitation concentration will lead to a faster permeability reduction. The findings of this study can help provide better understanding of the permeability impairment caused by asphaltene deposition and pore blockage, which provides useful insights for prediction of production performance of oil wells.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 664 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Avendaño ◽  
Nicolle Lima ◽  
Antonio Quevedo ◽  
Marcio Carvalho

Wettability has a dramatic impact on fluid displacement in porous media. The pore level physics of one liquid being displaced by another is a strong function of the wetting characteristics of the channel walls. However, the quantification of the effect is still not clear. Conflicting data have shown that in some oil displacement experiments in rocks, the volume of trapped oil falls as the porous media becomes less water-wet, while in some microfluidic experiments the volume of residual oil is higher in oil-wet media. The reasons for this discrepancy are not fully understood. In this study, we analyzed oil displacement by water injection in two microfluidic porous media with different wettability characteristics that had capillaries with constrictions. The resulting oil ganglia size distribution at the end of water injection was quantified by image processing. The results show that in the oil-wet porous media, the displacement front was more uniform and the final volume of remaining oil was smaller, with a much smaller number of large oil ganglia and a larger number of small oil ganglia, when compared to the water-wet media.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaodong Han ◽  
Liguo Zhong ◽  
Yigang Liu ◽  
Tao Fang ◽  
Cunliang Chen

Abstract Fine migration is always considered as one of the major mechanisms that are responsible for formation damage. The unwanted reduction of reservoir permeability would result in the decline of water injection and consequent oil production, especially for the unconsolidated sandstone reservoir. For better understanding, the mechanisms of formation damage in pore-scale, a new three-dimensional pore-scale network model (PNM) is proposed and developed to simulate formation damage caused by particle detachment, migration, and capture in pore throats based on force analysis. Experiments are also conducted on the formation damage characteristics of an unconsolidated core. Both X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscope (SEM) are applied to understand the microscopic reservoir properties. The experimental results show that the studied core has a strong flowrate sensitivity. A comparison between experimental results and PNM simulation results is conducted. The simulated results agree well with the experimental data, which approves the efficiency and accuracy of the PNM. Sensitivity analysis results show that larger particle sizes, higher flowrate, higher fluid viscosity, and lower ion concentration of the fluids would contribute to the formation damage, which could provide guidance for the development of unconsolidated sandstone reservoirs with strong sensitivity.


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