Application of Surfactants in Well Stimulation

Author(s):  
Pooya Khodaparast ◽  
Kristian Jessen
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ibrahim S. Abou-Sayed ◽  
Chris E. Shuchart ◽  
Ming Gong

Author(s):  
Nasiru Salahu Muhammed ◽  
Teslim Olayiwola ◽  
Salaheldin Elkatatny ◽  
Bashirul Haq ◽  
Shirish Patil

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 4874
Author(s):  
Milan Brankovic ◽  
Eduardo Gildin ◽  
Richard L. Gibson ◽  
Mark E. Everett

Seismic data provides integral information in geophysical exploration, for locating hydrocarbon rich areas as well as for fracture monitoring during well stimulation. Because of its high frequency acquisition rate and dense spatial sampling, distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) has seen increasing application in microseimic monitoring. Given large volumes of data to be analyzed in real-time and impractical memory and storage requirements, fast compression and accurate interpretation methods are necessary for real-time monitoring campaigns using DAS. In response to the developments in data acquisition, we have created shifted-matrix decomposition (SMD) to compress seismic data by storing it into pairs of singular vectors coupled with shift vectors. This is achieved by shifting the columns of a matrix of seismic data before applying singular value decomposition (SVD) to it to extract a pair of singular vectors. The purpose of SMD is data denoising as well as compression, as reconstructing seismic data from its compressed form creates a denoised version of the original data. By analyzing the data in its compressed form, we can also run signal detection and velocity estimation analysis. Therefore, the developed algorithm can simultaneously compress and denoise seismic data while also analyzing compressed data to estimate signal presence and wave velocities. To show its efficiency, we compare SMD to local SVD and structure-oriented SVD, which are similar SVD-based methods used only for denoising seismic data. While the development of SMD is motivated by the increasing use of DAS, SMD can be applied to any seismic data obtained from a large number of receivers. For example, here we present initial applications of SMD to readily available marine seismic data.


Nanoscale ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 3895-3910
Author(s):  
Tongxin Song ◽  
Fei Gao ◽  
Siyu Guo ◽  
Yangping Zhang ◽  
Shujin Li ◽  
...  

The roles of surfactants in the morphology control of nanoparticles are reviewed, including dispersion, structure direct, cap, reduction, etch, and ion exchange. The application of surfactants in the synthesis of nanoparticles is prospected.


1982 ◽  
Vol 34 (08) ◽  
pp. 1805-1810 ◽  
Author(s):  
John T. Patton ◽  
Phil Sigmund ◽  
Brian Evans ◽  
Shanu Ghose ◽  
Dick Weinbrandt

2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (02) ◽  
pp. 393-408
Author(s):  
Daniel I. O'Reilly ◽  
Brad S. Hopcroft ◽  
Kate A. Nelligan ◽  
Guan K. Ng ◽  
Bree H. Goff ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albert Bokkers ◽  
Piter Brandenburg ◽  
Coert Van Lare ◽  
Cees Kooijman ◽  
Arjan Schutte

Abstract This work presents a matrix acidizing formulation which comprises a salt of monochloroacetic acid giving a delayed acidification and a chelating agent to prevent precipitation of a calcium salt. Results of dissolution capacity, core flood test and corrosion inhibition are presented and are compared to performance of 15 wt% emulsified HCl. Dissolution capacity tests were performed in a stirred reactor at atmospheric pressure using equimolar amounts of the crushed limestone and dolomites. Four different chelating agents were added to test the calcium ion sequestering power. Corrosion tests were executed using an autoclave reactor under nitrogen atmosphere at 10 barg. Core flood tests were performed to simulate carbonate matrix stimulation using limestone cores. It was found that the half-life time of the hydrolysis reaction is 77 min at a temperature of 100 °C. Sodium gluconate and the sodium salt of D-glucoheptonic acid were identified to successfully prevent the precipitation of the reaction product calcium glycolate at a temperature of 40 °C. Computed Tomography (CT) scans of the treated cores at optimum injection rate showed a single wormhole formed. At 150 °C an optimum injection rate of 1 ml/min was found which corresponds to a minimum PVBT of 6. In addition, no face dissolution was observed after coreflooding. Furthermore, the corrosion rates of different metallurgies (L80 and J55) were measured which are significantly less than data reported in literature for 15wt% emulsified HCl. The novelty of this formulation is that it slowly releases an organic acid in the well allowing deeper penetration in the formation and sodium gluconate prevents precipitation of the reaction product. The corrosivity of this formulation is relatively low saving maintenance costs to installations and pipe work. The active ingredient in the formulation is a solid, allowing onsite preparation of the acidizing fluid.


2020 ◽  
pp. 35-39
Author(s):  
T.Sh. Salavatov ◽  
◽  
M.A. Dadash-zade ◽  
T.S. Babaeva ◽  
◽  
...  

Numerous research surveys justified that the major purpose of well stimulation is the productivity increase by means of elimination of bottomhole damages in formation and well. This process appears directly by creating a certain structure in formation. Thus, in field conditions as a stimulation method the fracturing, acid treatment of reservoirs, as well as acid treatment of cracks (acid fracturing) are generally applied. Field studies showed that due to the radial nature of the flow the pressure decrease is basically occurs near the well and in the bottomhole. The analysis justifies that any damage in this area significantly increases the pressure reduction and the effect of such damages may be presented by means of “skin-factor”. The authors present more generalized concept of “skin factor” combining the most important aspects of bottomhole zone damages of production well. These processes create additional resistance decreasing production. From our perspective, the well stimulation is the productivity increase. In this case there is scientific-practical sense to consider the stimulation as a method for “skin-effect” value reduction. The paper offers a new parameter of “generalized skin-effect” or “generalized skin-factor” showing positive results with negative values, i.e. increases performance and productivity.


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