Field Application of Microbubble CO2 Injection for Enhanced Storage Efficiency in a Tight Sandstone Reservoir

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ziqiu Xue
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qianhui Wu ◽  
Jijiang Ge ◽  
Lei Ding ◽  
Kaipeng Wei ◽  
Yuelong Liu ◽  
...  

Abstract The wide existence of fractures makes conformance control by polymer gels more challenging in water-flooded oil reservoirs. Selection of an applicable gel system and design of an intelligent approach for gel treatment are key components for a successful field application. Moreover, selecting the candidate wells and determining the injection volume of gel are also critical to the success of gel treatments. A gel system with adjustable polymer concentrations was applied for conformance control in fractured tight sandstone reservoir, and notably, less than 5% of syneresis was detected after aging for one year at reservoir condition. The viscosity and the gelation time of this gel system can be adjusted according to the targeted reservoir conditions. The pilot test was conducted in Huabei oilfield (China), and the oil recovery after water flooding was only about 20% original oil in place (OOIP). With further exploitation of the oil field, the majority of the reservoir has suffered from poor sweep efficiency and extremely high water cuts. To characterize the distribution of fractures, the seismic coherence cube was utilized. In addition, the pressure transient test, interwell tracer test and the injection-production data were used collaboratively to determine the volume of fractures in the reservoir. The option of gel formulation and the determination of operational parameters are mainly based on the wellhead pressure. According to the seismic coherence cube, the zone of candidate well group shows a weak coherence state, indicating that numerous fractures exist. Furthermore, there is good continuity between the candidate injection well and the production well. According to the pressure transient test, the volume of re-open fracture is about 1730.9 m3, while the volume of micro-fracture is about 4839.4 m3. Comparably, based on the interwell tracer test, the estimated volume of fractures is approximately 3219.7 m3. Consequently, the designed volume of gel for treatment is 1500.0 m3 in total. The properties of gel slugs were carefully designed, which was tailored to the specific wellbore conditions and formation characteristics. Three months after the gel treatment, the average oil production was increased from 0.36 t/d to 0.9 t/d, and the water cut was decreased from 95.77% to 88.7%. The improved oil production was still benefited from this gel treatment after one year. This study provides a comprehensive approach, from optimization of gel formulation, followed by selection of candidate wells, to calculation of the injected volume, to design the viable operational parameters, for gel treatment field application in fractured reservoirs. It shows that, besides a gel system with superior properties, a suitable injected volume of gel may enhance the chance of success for gel treatments.


SPE Journal ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (03) ◽  
pp. 750-761 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haitao Wang ◽  
Zengmin Lun ◽  
Chengyuan Lv ◽  
Dongjiang Lang ◽  
Weiyi Pan ◽  
...  

Summary Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) was used to investigate the exposure between carbon dioxide (CO2) and the sandstone matrix with a permeability of 0.218 md and a porosity of 9.5% at 40°C and 12 MPa (immiscible condition). Minimum miscibility pressure (MMP) between oil and CO2 was 17.8 MPa, determined by slimtube test at 40°C. The exposure process between CO2 and the sandstone matrix included first, second, third, and fourth exposure experiments. Before each exposure experiment started, there was a CO2-injection stage with a CO2 injection under a constant pressure of 12 MPa and at a constant rate to keep fresh CO2 (concentration of CO2 is 100% in gas phase) in the system. Each exposure experiment ended when the obtained T2 spectrum was unchanged (total amount of oil in tight matrix remains constant). These processes were similar to CO2 huff ’n’ puff. The results showed that (1) oil in all pores could mobilize as exposure time increases in the first exposure experiment. (2) The total original-oil-in-place (OOIP) recovery is 46.6% for oil in big pores (29 ms < T2 ≤ 645 ms)—this result is higher than the recovery (12.8%) for oil in small pores (T2 ≤ 29 ms). (3) Oil is mobilized fast in the initial exposure hours, and then the rate drops gradually until no more oil is produced. (4) Initially, the oil exists in pores with maximum relaxation times of 645 ms in the originally saturated core. After the CO2 injection, oil flows to pores with relaxation times slower than 645 ms, suggesting that oil in tight matrix is mobilized to the surface of core by swelling caused by CO2 diffusion. (5) The final OOIP recoveries of first, second, third, and fourth exposure experiments are 23.7, 7.2, 2.6, and 1.5%, respectively, and they decline exponentially. Oil mobilization in a tight-sandstone reservoir exposed to CO2 was observed by NMR T2 spectra under multiple exposure experiments. Mechanisms of oil mobilization were investigated (i.e., oil swelling, concentration-driven diffusion of hydrocarbons, and extraction of light components). The CO2 enhanced oil recovery (EOR) with multiple injections under immiscible conditions is acceptable and satisfactory in a tight-sandstone reservoir. CO2 huff ’n’ puff with optimized injection, soaking, and production process is an economic development method in a tight sandstone reservoir.


2021 ◽  
pp. 014459872199851
Author(s):  
Yuyang Liu ◽  
Xiaowei Zhang ◽  
Junfeng Shi ◽  
Wei Guo ◽  
Lixia Kang ◽  
...  

As an important type of unconventional hydrocarbon, tight sandstone oil has great present and future resource potential. Reservoir quality evaluation is the basis of tight sandstone oil development. A comprehensive evaluation approach based on the gray correlation algorithm is established to effectively assess tight sandstone reservoir quality. Seven tight sandstone samples from the Chang 6 reservoir in the W area of the AS oilfield in the Ordos Basin are employed. First, the petrological and physical characteristics of the study area reservoir are briefly discussed through thin section observations, electron microscopy analysis, core physical property tests, and whole-rock and clay mineral content experiments. Second, the pore type, throat type and pore and throat combination characteristics are described from casting thin sections and scanning electron microscopy. Third, high-pressure mercury injection and nitrogen adsorption experiments are optimized to evaluate the characteristic parameters of pore throat distribution, micro- and nanopore throat frequency, permeability contribution and volume continuous distribution characteristics to quantitatively characterize the reservoir micro- and nanopores and throats. Then, the effective pore throat frequency specific gravity parameter of movable oil and the irreducible oil pore throat volume specific gravity parameter are introduced and combined with the reservoir physical properties, multipoint Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) specific surface area, displacement pressure, maximum mercury saturation and mercury withdrawal efficiency parameters as the basic parameters for evaluation of tight sandstone reservoir quality. Finally, the weight coefficient of each parameter is calculated by the gray correlation method, and a reservoir comprehensive evaluation indicator (RCEI) is designed. The results show that the study area is dominated by types II and III tight sandstone reservoirs. In addition, the research method in this paper can be further extended to the evaluation of shale gas and other unconventional reservoirs after appropriate modification.


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