scholarly journals Application of ion-engineered Persian Gulf seawater in EOR: effects of different ions on interfacial tension, contact angle, zeta potential, and oil recovery

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir Hossein Saeedi Dehaghani ◽  
Seyed Masoud Ghalamizade Elyaderani

AbstractIn this study, we initially performed interfacial tension (IFT) tests to investigate the potential of using the Persian Gulf seawater (PGSW) as smart water with different concentrations of NaCl, KCl, MgCl2, CaCl2, and Na2SO4. Next, for each salt, at the concentration where IFT was minimum, we conducted contact angle, zeta potential, and micromodel flooding tests. The results showed that IFT is minimized if NaCl or KCl is removed from PGSW; thus, for solutions lacking NaCl and KCl, the IFT values were obtained at 26.29 and 26.56 mN/m, respectively. Conversely, in the case of divalent ions, minimum IFT occurred when the concentration of MgCl2, CaCl2, and Na2SO4 in PGSW increased. Specifically, a threefold rise in the concentration of Na2SO4 further reduced IFT as compared to optimal concentrations of MgCl2 or CaCl2. It should be mentioned that eliminating NaCl from PGSW resulted in the lowest IFT value compared to adding or removing other ions. Whereas the removal of NaCl caused the contact angle to decrease from 91.0° to 67.8° relative to PGSW and changed surface wettability to weakly water-wet, eliminating KCl did not considerably change the contact angle, such that it only led to a nine-degree reduction in this angle relative to PGSW and left wettability in the same neutral-wet condition. At optimal concentrations of MgCl2, CaCl2, and Na2SO4, only an increase in Na2SO4 concentration in PGSW could change wettability from neutral-wet to weakly water-wet. For solutions with optimal concentrations, the removal of NaCl or KCl caused the rock surface to have slightly higher negative charges, and increasing the concentration of divalent ions led to a small reduction in the negative charge of the surface. The results of micromodel flooding indicated that NaCl-free PGSW could raise oil recovery by 10.12% relative to PGSW. Furthermore, when the Na2SO4 concentration in PGSW was tripled, the oil recovery increased by 7.34% compared to PGSW. Accordingly, depending on the conditions, it is possible to use PGSW so as to enhance the efficiency of oil recovery by removing NaCl or by increasing the concentration of Na2SO4 three times.

2016 ◽  
Vol 864 ◽  
pp. 194-198 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohd Shahrizan Moslan ◽  
Wan Rosli Wan Sulaiman ◽  
Abdul Razak Ismail ◽  
Mohd Zaidi Jaafar ◽  
Issham Ismail

Wettability alteration of rock by surfactant has been considered as feasible method for recovery of oil reservoirs by modifying the wettability of rock surface from oil-wet to water-wet condition. The impact of surfactant can be enhanced by adding nanoparticles. Cationic surfactant performed well in carbonate rock by forming ion pairs between cationic head and acidic component of the crude. Meanwhile, nanoparticles will form continuous wedge film between the liquid and solid surface. In this paper, Al2O3 and ZrO2 nanoparticles were used as enhanced oil recovery (EOR) agents. The impact of these two nanoparticles on contact angle and interfacial tension was studied. Besides that, adsorption Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide (CTAB) surfactant on rock surface was also investigated. The results show a significant change in water-oil contact angle after application of surfactant and nanoparticles. Initial water-oil contact angle for 6 dolomites demonstrate oil-wet condition. Then, the dolomites were submerged in prepared solution for 48 hours. The result shows that, dolomites 2, 5 and 6 changes drastically to more water-wet condition with contact angle 56°, 40° and 47° respectively. For surfactant adsorption, the adsorption is very fast at the beginning. The adsorption rate after 5 minutes was 50 mg/g and after 60 minutes the adsorption rate was 310 mg/g. The adsorption rate slowed down after 60 minutes and after 180 minutes the adsorption rate was 315 mg/g in which the rate of adsorption achieve equilibrium. Nanoparticles retention test and Zeta potential shows that Al2O3 is more stable than ZrO2. The results for interfacial tension (IFT) also show a significant reduction. The IFT value reduces from 8.46 mN/m to 1.65 mN/m and 1.85 mN/m after the application of Al2O3 and ZrO2 nanofluids respectively


Author(s):  
H. Samara ◽  
T. V. Ostrowski ◽  
F. Ayad Abdulkareem ◽  
E. Padmanabhan ◽  
P. Jaeger

AbstractShales are mostly unexploited energy resources. However, the extraction and production of their hydrocarbons require innovative methods. Applications involving carbon dioxide in shales could combine its potential use in oil recovery with its storage in view of its impact on global climate. The success of these approaches highly depends on various mechanisms taking place in the rock pores simultaneously. In this work, properties governing these mechanisms are presented at technically relevant conditions. The pendant and sessile drop methods are utilized to measure interfacial tension and wettability, respectively. The gravimetric method is used to quantify CO2 adsorption capacity of shale and gas adsorption kinetics is evaluated to determine diffusion coefficients. It is found that interfacial properties are strongly affected by the operating pressure. The oil-CO2 interfacial tension shows a decrease from approx. 21 mN/m at 0.1 MPa to around 3 mN/m at 20 MPa. A similar trend is observed in brine-CO2 systems. The diffusion coefficient is observed to slightly increase with pressure at supercritical conditions. Finally, the contact angle is found to be directly related to the gas adsorption at the rock surface: Up to 3.8 wt% of CO2 is adsorbed on the shale surface at 20 MPa and 60 °C where a maximum in contact angle is also found. To the best of the author’s knowledge, the affinity of calcite-rich surfaces toward CO2 adsorption is linked experimentally to the wetting behavior for the first time. The results are discussed in terms of CO2 storage scenarios occurring optimally at 20 MPa.


Polymers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 2241
Author(s):  
Vladislav Arekhov ◽  
Rafael E. Hincapie ◽  
Torsten Clemens ◽  
Muhammad Tahir

The injection of chemicals into sandstones can lead to alterations in wettability, where oil characteristics such as the TAN (total acid number) may determine the wetting state of the reservoir. By combining the spontaneous imbibition principle and the evaluation of interfacial tension index, we propose a workflow and comprehensive assessment to evaluate the wettability alteration and interfacial tension (IFT) when injecting chemical-enhanced oil-recovery (EOR) agents. This study examines the effects on wettability alteration due to the application of alkaline and polymer solutions (separately) and the combined alkali–polymer solution. The evaluation focused on comparing the effects of chemical agent injections on wettability and IFT due to core aging (non-aged, water-wet and aged, and neutral to oil-wet), brine composition (mono vs. divalent ions); core mineralogy (~2.5% and ~10% clay), and crude oil type (low and high TAN). Amott experiments were performed on cleaned water-wet core plugs as well as on samples with a restored oil-wet state. IFT experiments were compared for a duration of 300 min. Data were gathered from 48 Amott imbibition experiments with duplicates. The IFT and baselines were defined in each case for brine, polymer, and alkali for each set of experiments. When focusing on the TAN and aging effects, it was observed that in all cases, the early time production was slower and the final oil recovery was longer when compared to the values for non-aged core plugs. These data confirm the change in rock surface wettability towards a more oil-wet state after aging and reverse the wettability alteration due to chemical injections. Furthermore, the application of alkali with high TAN oil resulted in a low equilibrium IFT. By contrast, alkali alone failed to mobilize trapped low TAN oil but caused wettability alteration and a neutral–wet state of the aged core plugs. For the brine composition, the presence of divalent ions promoted water-wetness of the non-aged core plugs and oil-wetness of the aged core plugs. Divalent ions act as bridges between the mineral surface and polar compound of the in situ created surfactant, thereby accelerating wettability alteration. Finally, for mineralogy effects, the high clay content core plugs were shown to be more oil-wet even without aging. Following aging, a strongly oil-wet behavior was exhibited. The alkali–polymer is demonstrated to be efficient in the wettability alteration of oil-wet core plugs towards a water-wet state.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ibraheem Salaudeen ◽  
Muhammad Rehan Hashmet ◽  
Peyman Pourafshary

Abstract Nano particle-assisted engineered water is one of the newest hybrid methods of Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) that is gaining attention in the oil and gas industry. This is attributed to the low cost of the technique and environmental friendliness of the materials involved. Low salinity and ions adjustment of the injection brine has been reported to be very useful for improving oil production in carbonates, and application of nanoparticles (NPs) to improve oil recovery via different mechanisms such as wettability alteration, interfacial tension reduction, disjoining pressure and viscosity modification. This paper therefore investigates the combined effects of these two techniques on oil-brine-rock (OBR) interactions in carbonate reservoirs. Caspian Sea Water salinity of 13000 ppm was synthesized in the laboratory, potential determining ions such as Mg2+, Ca2+ and SO42- were adjusted to obtain the desired engineered waters used as dispersant for SiO2 nanoparticle. A series of experiments were performed ranging from zeta potential, interfacial tension, contact angle, electron scanning environmental imaging, pH analysis and particle size to determine the optimum formulation of engineered low salinity brine and nanoparticle. The salinities and concentration of NP considered in this experimental study ranges between (3,250 - 40,000) ppm and (0.05 - 0.5) wt.%, respectively. It was observed that optimum homogenization time for achieving stability of the chosen nanofluid without using stabilizer is 45 minutes. Four times sulphate and calcium ions in the engineered water reduced the contact angle from 163 to 109 and 151 to 118 degrees respectively. However, in the presence of NP, the contact angle further reduced to a very low values of 5 and 41 degrees. This confirms the combined effects of EW and that of nanofluid (NF) in altering wettability from the hydrophobicity state to hydrophilicity one that rapidly improves oil recovery in carbonate reservoir. IFT measurements were made between oil and formation brine as well as between oil and different EWs at room temperature. The Formation water has the least value of interfacial tension- 15mN/m. Four times diluted sea water spiked with four times sulphate is denoted as 4dsw4S. The zeta potential values showed dsw4S-NF to be the most stable, whereas EW-NF spiked with 4 times Mg2+ show detrimental effects on NF stability. The nanoparticles sizes were measured to be less than 50 nm. Rheological studies of the EW-NF at different temperatures (25, 40, 60 and 80 degrees Celsius) shows similar trend of Newtonian and non-Newtonian behavior at shear rate less than 100 and above 100 per seconds respectively. We conclude that spiking calcium ion and sulphate ion into the injected brine in combination with 0.1wt% NP yielded the wettability alteration in carbonate rock samples. The significant reduction in wettability is attributed to the combined effects of the active mechanisms present in the hybrid method and is considerably better than each standalone technique.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 712-721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeb Ahmadi ◽  
Mostafa Hosseini ◽  
Ebrahim Tangestani ◽  
Seyyed Ebrahim Mousavi ◽  
Mohammad Niazi

AbstractNaturally fractured carbonate reservoirs have very low oil recovery efficiency owing to their wettability and tightness of matrix. However, smart water can enhance oil recovery by changing the wettability of the carbonate rock surface from oil-wet to water-wet, and the addition of surfactants can also change surface wettability. In the present study, the effects of a solution of modified seawater with some surfactants, namely C12TAB, SDS, and TritonX-100 (TX-100), on the wettability of carbonate rock were investigated through contact angle measurements. Oil recovery was studied using spontaneous imbibition tests at 25, 70, and 90 °C, followed by thermal gravity analysis to measure the amount of adsorbed material on the carbonate surface. The results indicated that Ca2+, Mg2+, and SO42− ions may alter the carbonate rock wettability from oil-wet to water-wet, with further water wettability obtained at higher concentrations of the ions in modified seawater. Removal of NaCl from the imbibing fluid resulted in a reduced contact angle and significantly enhanced oil recovery. Low oil recoveries were obtained with modified seawater at 25 and 70 °C, but once the temperature was increased to 90 °C, the oil recovery in the spontaneous imbibition experiment increased dramatically. Application of smart water with C12TAB surfactant at 0.1 wt% changed the contact angle from 161° to 52° and enhanced oil recovery to 72%, while the presence of the anionic surfactant SDS at 0.1 wt% in the smart water increased oil recovery to 64.5%. The TGA analysis results indicated that the adsorbed materials on the carbonate surface were minimal for the solution containing seawater with C12TAB at 0.1 wt% (SW + CTAB (0.1 wt%)). Based on the experimental results, a mechanism was proposed for wettability alteration of carbonate rocks using smart water with SDS and C12TAB surfactants.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu-Guang Song ◽  
Ming-Wei Zhao ◽  
Cai-Li Dai ◽  
Xin-Ke Wang ◽  
Wen-Jiao Lv

AbstractThe ultra-low permeability reservoir is regarded as an important energy source for oil and gas resource development and is attracting more and more attention. In this work, the active silica nanofluids were prepared by modified active silica nanoparticles and surfactant BSSB-12. The dispersion stability tests showed that the hydraulic radius of nanofluids was 58.59 nm and the zeta potential was − 48.39 mV. The active nanofluids can simultaneously regulate liquid–liquid interface and solid–liquid interface. The nanofluids can reduce the oil/water interfacial tension (IFT) from 23.5 to 6.7 mN/m, and the oil/water/solid contact angle was altered from 42° to 145°. The spontaneous imbibition tests showed that the oil recovery of 0.1 wt% active nanofluids was 20.5% and 8.5% higher than that of 3 wt% NaCl solution and 0.1 wt% BSSB-12 solution. Finally, the effects of nanofluids on dynamic contact angle, dynamic interfacial tension and moduli were studied from the adsorption behavior of nanofluids at solid–liquid and liquid–liquid interface. The oil detaching and transporting are completed by synergistic effect of wettability alteration and interfacial tension reduction. The findings of this study can help in better understanding of active nanofluids for EOR in ultra-low permeability reservoirs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 303 ◽  
pp. 01001
Author(s):  
Yu Haiyang ◽  
Ji Wenjuan ◽  
Luo Cheng ◽  
Lu Junkai ◽  
Yan Fei ◽  
...  

In order to give full play to the role of imbibition of capillary force and enhance oil recovery of ultralow permeability sandstone reservoir after hydraulic fracturing, the mixed water fracture technology based on functional slick water is described and successfully applied to several wells in oilfield. The core of the technology is determination of influence factors of imbibition oil recovery, the development of new functional slick water system and optimization of volume fracturing parameters. The imbibition results show that it is significant effect of interfacial tension, wetting on imbibition oil recovery. The interfacial tension decreases by an order of magnitude, the imbibition oil recovery reduces by more than 10%. The imbibition oil recovery increases with the contact angle decreasing. The emulsifying ability has no obvious effect on imbibition oil recovery. The functional slick water system considering imbibition is developed based on the solution rheology and polymer chemistry. The system has introduced the active group and temperature resistant group into the polymer molecules. The molecular weight is controlled in 1.5 million. The viscosity is greater than 2mPa·s after shearing 2h under 170s-1 and 100℃. The interfacial tension could decrease to 10-2mN/m. The contact angle decreased from 58° to 22° and the core damage rate is less than 12%. The imbibition oil recovery could reach to 43%. The fracturing process includes slick water stage and linear gel stage. 10% 100 mesh ceramists and 8% temporary plugging agents are carried into the formation by functional slick water. 40-70 mesh ceramists are carried by linear gel. The liquid volume ratio is about 4:1 and the displacement is controlled at 10-12m3/min. The sand content and fracturing fluid volumes of single stage are 80m3 and 2500 m3 respectively. Compared with conventional fracturing, due to imbibition oil recovery, there is only 25% of the fracturing fluid flowback rate when the crude oil flew out. When the oil well is in normal production, about 50% of the fracturing fluid is not returned. It is useful to maintain the formation energy and slow down the production decline. The average cumulative production of vertical wells is greater than 2800t, and the effective period is more than 2 years. This technology overcoming the problem of high horizontal stress difference and lack of natural fracture has been successfully applied in Jidong Oilfield ultralow permeability reservoir. The successful application of this technology not only helps to promote the effective use of ultralow permeability reservoirs, but also helps to further clarify the role of imbibition recovery, energy storage and oil-water replacement mechanism.


2020 ◽  
Vol 146 ◽  
pp. 02003
Author(s):  
Moataz Abu-Al-Saud ◽  
Amani Al-Ghamdi ◽  
Subhash Ayirala ◽  
Mohammed Al-Otaibi

Understanding the effect of injection water chemistry is becoming crucial, as it has been recently shown to have a major impact on oil recovery processes in carbonate formations. Various studies have concluded that surface charge alteration is the primary mechanism behind the observed change of wettability towards water-wet due to SmartWater injection in carbonates. Therefore, understanding the surface charges at brine/calcite and brine/crude oil interfaces becomes essential to optimize the injection water compositions for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) in carbonate formations. In this work, the physicochemical interactions of different brine recipes with and without alkali in carbonates are evaluated using Surface Complexation Model (SCM). First, the zeta-potential of brine/calcite and brine/crude oil interfaces are determined for Smart Water, NaCl, and Na2SO4 brines at fixed salinity. The high salinity seawater is also included to provide the baseline for comparison. Then, two types of Alkali (NaOH and Na2CO3) are added at 0.1 wt% concentration to the different brine recipes to verify their effects on the computed zeta-potential values in the SCM framework. The SCM results are compared with experimental data of zeta-potentials obtained with calcite in brine and crude oil in brine suspensions using the same brines and the two alkali concentrations. The SCM results follow the same trends observed in experimental data to reasonably match the zeta-potential values at the calcite/brine interface. Generally, the addition of alkaline drives the zeta-potentials towards more negative values. This trend towards negative zeta-potential is confirmed for the Smart Water recipe with the impact being more pronounced for Na2CO3 due to the presence of divalent anion carbonate (CO3)-2. Some discrepancy in the zeta-potential magnitude between the SCM results and experiments is observed at the brine/crude oil interface with the addition of alkali. This discrepancy can be attributed to neglecting the reaction of carboxylic acid groups in the crude oil with strong alkali as NaOH and Na2CO3. The novelty of this work is that it clearly validates the SCM results with experimental zeta-potential data to determine the physicochemical interaction of alkaline chemicals with SmartWater in carbonates. These modeling results provide new insights on defining optimal SmartWater compositions to synergize with alkaline chemicals to further improve oil recovery in carbonate reservoirs.


Nanomaterials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 1296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reidun C. Aadland ◽  
Salem Akarri ◽  
Ellinor B. Heggset ◽  
Kristin Syverud ◽  
Ole Torsæter

Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) and 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO)-oxidized cellulose nanofibrils (T-CNFs) were tested as enhanced oil recovery (EOR) agents through core floods and microfluidic experiments. Both particles were mixed with low salinity water (LSW). The core floods were grouped into three parts based on the research objectives. In Part 1, secondary core flood using CNCs was compared to regular water flooding at fixed conditions, by reusing the same core plug to maintain the same pore structure. CNCs produced 5.8% of original oil in place (OOIP) more oil than LSW. For Part 2, the effect of injection scheme, temperature, and rock wettability was investigated using CNCs. The same trend was observed for the secondary floods, with CNCs performing better than their parallel experiment using LSW. Furthermore, the particles seemed to perform better under mixed-wet conditions. Additional oil (2.9–15.7% of OOIP) was produced when CNCs were injected as a tertiary EOR agent, with more incremental oil produced at high temperature. In the final part, the effect of particle type was studied. T-CNFs produced significantly more oil compared to CNCs. However, the injection of T-CNF particles resulted in a steep increase in pressure, which never stabilized. Furthermore, a filter cake was observed at the core face after the experiment was completed. Microfluidic experiments showed that both T-CNF and CNC nanofluids led to a better sweep efficiency compared to low salinity water flooding. T-CNF particles showed the ability to enhance the oil recovery by breaking up events and reducing the trapping efficiency of the porous medium. A higher flow rate resulted in lower oil recovery factors and higher remaining oil connectivity. Contact angle and interfacial tension measurements were conducted to understand the oil recovery mechanisms. CNCs altered the interfacial tension the most, while T-CNFs had the largest effect on the contact angle. However, the changes were not significant enough for them to be considered primary EOR mechanisms.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 749-758
Author(s):  
Omolbanin Seiedi ◽  
Mohammad Zahedzadeh ◽  
Emad Roayaei ◽  
Morteza Aminnaji ◽  
Hossein Fazeli

AbstractWater flooding is widely applied for pressure maintenance or increasing the oil recovery of reservoirs. The heterogeneity and wettability of formation rocks strongly affect the oil recovery efficiency in carbonate reservoirs. During seawater injection in carbonate formations, the interactions between potential seawater ions and the carbonate rock at a high temperature can alter the wettability to a more water-wet condition. This paper studies the wettability of one of the Iranian carbonate reservoirs which has been under Persian Gulf seawater injection for more than 10 years. The wettability of the rock is determined by indirect contact angle measurement using Rise in Core technique. Further, the characterization of the rock surface is evaluated by molecular kinetic theory (MKT) modeling. The data obtained from experiments show that rocks are undergoing neutral wetting after the aging process. While the wettability of low permeable samples changes to be slightly water-wet, the wettability of the samples with higher permeability remains unchanged after soaking in seawater. Experimental data and MKT analysis indicate that wettability alteration of these carbonate rocks through prolonged seawater injection might be insignificant.


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