scholarly journals Experimental investigation of chemical solutions effects on wettability alteration and interfacial tension reduction using nano-alkaline–surfactant fluid: an EOR application in carbonate reservoirs

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 1925-1941
Author(s):  
M. Sadegh Rajabi ◽  
Rasoul Moradi ◽  
Masoud Mehrizadeh

AbstractThe wettability preference of carbonate reservoirs is neutral-wet or oil-wet as the prevailing of hydrocarbon reserves that affects approximately half of the total production of hydrocarbons of the world. Therefore, due to surface wettability of carbonate rocks the notable fraction of oil is held inside their pores in comparison with sandstones. Since shifting the wettability preference toward water-wet system is of great interest, numerous components were used for this purpose. In this experimental research, the wettability alteration of dolomite surface by interacting with a novel nano-surfactant–alkaline fluid has been investigated in order to diminish its adhesion to crude oil droplets. The solutions were prepared by homogenous mixing of nanosilica particles with cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide and sodium carbonate, respectively, as a cationic surfactant and alkaline agent. The maximum wettability alteration from oil-wet to water system was obtained by employing a mixture of nanoparticles in association with surfactant–alkaline. Then, the fluids were employed in core-surface from detached and attached forms to compare their interfacial effects on saturated thin sections by crude oil and to measure the wettability. In addition, the interfacial tension (IFT) between solutions and crude oil was investigated and the maximum IFT reduction was obtained from nano-surfactant. Finally, all chemical solutions were flooded to the dolomite plugs separately after water flooding in order to evaluate the maximum oil recovery factor acquired by nano-surfactant.

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.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 1551-1563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siamak Najimi ◽  
Iman Nowrouzi ◽  
Abbas Khaksar Manshad ◽  
Amir H. Mohammadi

Abstract Surfactants are used in the process of chemical water injection to reduce interfacial tension of water and oil and consequently decrease the capillary pressure in the reservoir. However, other mechanisms such as altering the wettability of the reservoir rock, creating foam and forming a stable emulsion are also other mechanisms of the surfactants flooding. In this study, the effects of three commercially available surfactants, namely AN-120, NX-1510 and TR-880, in different concentrations on interfacial tension of water and oil, the wettability of the reservoir rock and, ultimately, the increase in oil recovery based on pendant drop experiments, contact angle and carbonate core flooding have been investigated. The effects of concentration, temperature, pressure and salinity on the performances of these surfactants have also been shown. The results, in addition to confirming the capability of the surfactants to reduce interfacial tension and altering the wettability to hydrophilicity, show that the TR-880 has the better ability to reduce interfacial tension than AN-120 and NX-1510, and in the alteration of wettability the smallest contact angle was obtained by dissolving 1000 ppm of surfactant NX-1510. Also, the results of interfacial tension tests confirm the better performances of these surfactants in formation salinity and high salinity. Additionally, a total of 72% recovery was achieved with a secondary saline water flooding and flooding with a 1000 ppm of TR-880 surfactant.


Nanomaterials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 103
Author(s):  
Fatemeh Razavirad ◽  
Abbas Shahrabadi ◽  
Parham Babakhani Dehkordi ◽  
Alimorad Rashidi

Nanofluid flooding, as a new technique to enhance oil recovery, has recently aroused much attention. The current study considers the performance of a novel iron-carbon nanohybrid to EOR. Carbon nanoparticles was synthesized via the hydrothermal method with citric acid and hybridize with iron (Fe3O4). The investigated nanohybrid is characterized by its rheological properties (viscosity), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) analysis. The efficiency of the synthetized nanoparticle in displacing heavy oil is initially assessed using an oil–wet glass micromodel at ambient conditions. Nanofluid samples with various concentrations (0.05 wt % and 0.5 wt %) dispersed in a water base fluid with varied salinities were first prepared. The prepared nanofluids provide high stability with no additive such as polymer or surfactant. Before displacement experiments were run, to achieve a better understanding of fluid–fluid and grain–fluid interactions in porous media, a series of sub-pore scale tests—including interfacial tension (IFT), contact angle, and zeta potential—were conducted. Nanofluid flooding results show that the nanofluid with the medium base fluid salinity and highest nanoparticle concertation provides the highest oil recovery. However, it is observed that increasing the nanofluid concentration from 0.05% to 0.5% provided only three percent more oil. In contrast, the lowest oil recovery resulted from low salinity water flooding. It was also observed that the measured IFT value between nanofluids and crude oil is a function of nanofluid concentration and base fluid salinities, i.e., the IFT values decrease with the increase of nanofluid concentration and base fluid salinity reduction. However, the base fluid salinity enhancement leads to wettability alteration towards more water-wetness. The main mechanisms responsible for oil recovery enhancement during nanofluid flooding is mainly attributed to wettability alteration toward water-wetness and micro-dispersion formation. However, the interfacial tension (IFT) reduction using the iron-carbon nanohybrid is also observed but the reduction is not significant.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (15) ◽  
pp. 3988 ◽  
Author(s):  
Omid Haghighi ◽  
Ghasem Zargar ◽  
Abbas Khaksar Manshad ◽  
Muhammad Ali ◽  
Mohammad Takassi ◽  
...  

Production from mature oil reservoirs can be optimized by using the surfactant flooding technique. This can be achieved by reducing oil and water interfacial tension (IFT) and modifying wettability to hydrophilic conditions. In this study, a novel green non-ionic surfactant (dodecanoyl-glucosamine surfactant) was synthesized and used to modify the wettability of carbonate reservoirs to hydrophilic conditions as well as to decrease the IFT of hydrophobic oil–water systems. The synthesized non-ionic surfactant was characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and chemical shift nuclear magnetic resonance (HNMR) analyses. Further pH, turbidity, density, and conductivity were investigated to measure the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of surfactant solutions. The result shows that this surfactant alters wettability from 148.93° to 65.54° and IFT from 30 to 14 dynes/cm. Core-flooding results have shown that oil recovery was increased from 40% (by water flooding) to 59% (by surfactant flooding). In addition, it is identified that this novel non-ionic surfactant can be used in CO2 storage applications due to its ability to alter the hydrophobicity into hydrophilicity of the reservoir rocks.


SPE Journal ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 13 (02) ◽  
pp. 137-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kamlesh Kumar ◽  
Eric K. Dao ◽  
Kishore K. Mohanty

Summary Waterflooding recovers little oil from fractured carbonate reservoirs, if they are oil-wet or mixed-wet. Surfactant-aided gravity drainage has the potential to achieve significant oil recovery by wettability alteration and interfacial tension (IFT) reduction. The goal of this work is to investigate the mechanisms of wettability alteration by crude oil components and surfactants. Contact angles are measured on mineral plates treated with crude oils, crude oil components, and surfactants. Mineral surfaces are also studied by atomic force microscopy (AFM). Surfactant solution imbibition into parallel plates filled with a crude oil is investigated. Wettability of the plates is studied before and after imbibition. Results show that wettability is controlled by the adsorption of asphaltenes. Anionic surfactants can remove these adsorbed components from the mineral surface and induce preferential water wettability. Anionic surfactants studied can imbibe water into initially oil-wet parallel-plate assemblies faster than the cationic surfactant studied. Introduction Waterflooding is an effective method to improve oil recovery from reservoirs. For fractured reservoirs, waterflooding is effective only when water imbibes into the matrix spontaneously. If the matrix is oil-wet, the injected water displaces the oil only from the fractures. Water does not imbibe into the oil-wet matrix because of negative capillary pressure, resulting in very low oil recovery. Thus there is a need of tertiary or enhanced oil recovery techniques like surfactant flooding (Bragg et al. 1982; Kalpakci et al. 1990; Krumrine et al. 1982a; Krumrine et al. 1982b; Falls et al. 1992) to maximize production from such reservoirs. These techniques were developed in 1960s through 1980s for sandstone reservoirs, but were not widely applied because of low oil prices. Austad et al. (Austad and Milter 1997; Standnes and Austad 2000a; Standnes and Austad 2000b; Standnes and Austad 2003c) have recently demonstrated that surfactant flooding in chalk cores can change the wettability from oil-wet to water-wet conditions, thus leading to higher oil recovery (~70 % as compared to 5% when using pure brine). In 2003 (Standnes and Austad 2003a; Standnes and Austad 2003b; Strand et al. 2003), they identified cheap commercial cationic surfactants, C10NH2 and bioderivatives from the coconut palm termed Arquad and Dodigen (priced at US$ 3 per kg). These surfactants could recover 50 to 90% of oil in laboratory experiments. However, the cost involved is still high because of the required high concentration (~1 wt%) and thus there is a need to evaluate other surfactants. The advantage of using cationic surfactants for carbonates is that they have the same charge as the carbonate surfaces and thus have low adsorption. Nonionic surfactants and anionic surfactants have been tested by Chen et al. (2001) in both laboratory experiments and field pilots. Computed tomography scans revealed that surfactant imbibition was caused by countercurrent flow in the beginning and gravity-driven flow during the later stages. The basic idea behind these techniques is to alter wettability (from oil-wet to water-wet) and lower interfacial tension. Hirasaki and Zhang (2004) have studied different ethoxy and propoxy sulfates to achieve very low interfacial tension and alter wettability from oil-wet to intermediate-wet in laboratory experiments. The presence of Na2CO3 reduces the adsorption of anionic surfactant by lowering the zeta potential of calcite surfaces, and thus dilute anionic surfactant/alkali solution flooding seems to be very promising in recovering oil from oil-wet fractured carbonate reservoirs. It is very important to understand the mechanism of wettability alteration to design effective surfactant treatments and identify the components of oil responsible for making a surface oil-wet. It is postulated that oil is often produced in source rocks and then migrates into originally water-wet reservoirs. Some of the ionic/polar components of crude oil, mostly asphaltenes and resins, collect at the water/oil interface (Freer et al. 2003) and adsorb onto the mineral surface, thus rendering the surface oil-wet. In this work, we try to understand the nature of the adsorbed components by AFM. Recently, AFM has been used extensively to get the force-distance measurements between a tip and a surface. These force measurements can be used to calculate the surface energies using the Johnson-Kendall-Roberts (JKR), the Derjaguin-Muller-Toporov (DMT), and like theories (van der Vegte and Hadziioannou 1997; Schneider et al. 2003). AFM is also used extensively for imaging surfaces. It can be used in the contact mode for hard surfaces and in the tapping mode for soft surfaces. It can be used to image dry surfaces or wet surfaces; tapping mode in water is a relatively new technique. AFM images have been used to confirm the deposition of oil components on mineral surfaces (Buckley and Lord 2003; Toulhoat et al. 1994). In this work, crude-oil-treated mica surface is probed using atomic force microscopy before and after surfactant treatment to study the effects of surfactant. AFM measurements are correlated with contact-angle measurements. We also study surfactant solution imbibition into an initially oil-wet parallel plate assembly to relate wettability to oil recovery. Our experimental methodology is described in the next section, the results are discussed in the following section, and the conclusions are summarized in the last section.


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.


SPE Journal ◽  
2022 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Song Qing ◽  
Hong Chen ◽  
Li-juan Han ◽  
Zhongbin Ye ◽  
Yihao Liao ◽  
...  

Summary α-Zirconium phosphate (α-ZrP) nanocrystals were synthesized by refluxing method and subsequently exfoliated into extremely thin 2D nanosheets by tetrabutylammonium hydroxide (TBAOH) solution. Dynamic light scattering, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were used to characterize the size distribution and morphology of α-ZrP nanosheets. Interfacial tension (IFT) and contact angle measurement were conducted by different concentrations of α-ZrP nanosheets solutions. The results displayed that the wettability of porous media surface was altered from oleophilic to hydrophilic and the IFT decreased with the increasing of α-ZrP nanosheets concentrations. A new method was proposed to calculate the Hamaker constant for 2D α-ZrP nanosheets. The calculated results displayed that α-ZrP nanosheets were not easy to agglomerate under experimental environment and when the interaction energy barrier increased, the transport amount of α-ZrP nanosheets also increased. Coreflooding tests were also performed with various concentrations and the oil recovery efficiency increased from 33.59 to 51.26% when α-ZrP nanosheets concentrations increased from 50 to 1,000 ppm.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document