Geochemical Monitoring of Fluid-Rock Interaction and CO2 Storage at the Weyburn CO2-Injection Enhanced Oil Recovery Site, Saskatchewan, Canada

Author(s):  
S EMBERLEY ◽  
I HUTCHEON ◽  
M SHEVALIER ◽  
K DUROCHER ◽  
W GUNTER ◽  
...  
Energy ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 29 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 1393-1401 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Emberley ◽  
I. Hutcheon ◽  
M. Shevalier ◽  
K. Durocher ◽  
W.D. Gunter ◽  
...  

Nanomaterials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 1917
Author(s):  
Zachary Paul Alcorn ◽  
Tore Føyen ◽  
Jarand Gauteplass ◽  
Benyamine Benali ◽  
Aleksandra Soyke ◽  
...  

Nanoparticles have gained attention for increasing the stability of surfactant-based foams during CO2 foam-enhanced oil recovery (EOR) and CO2 storage. However, the behavior and displacement mechanisms of hybrid nanoparticle–surfactant foam formulations at reservoir conditions are not well understood. This work presents a pore- to core-scale characterization of hybrid nanoparticle–surfactant foaming solutions for CO2 EOR and the associated CO2 storage. The primary objective was to identify the dominant foam generation mechanisms and determine the role of nanoparticles for stabilizing CO2 foam and reducing CO2 mobility. In addition, we shed light on the influence of oil on foam generation and stability. We present pore- and core-scale experimental results, in the absence and presence of oil, comparing the hybrid foaming solution to foam stabilized by only surfactants or nanoparticles. Snap-off was identified as the primary foam generation mechanism in high-pressure micromodels with secondary foam generation by leave behind. During continuous CO2 injection, gas channels developed through the foam and the texture coarsened. In the absence of oil, including nanoparticles in the surfactant-laden foaming solutions did not result in a more stable foam or clearly affect the apparent viscosity of the foam. Foaming solutions containing only nanoparticles generated little to no foam, highlighting the dominance of surfactant as the main foam generator. In addition, foam generation and strength were not sensitive to nanoparticle concentration when used together with the selected surfactant. In experiments with oil at miscible conditions, foam was readily generated using all the tested foaming solutions. Core-scale foam-apparent viscosities with oil were nearly three times as high as experiments without oil present due to the development of stable oil/water emulsions and their combined effect with foam for reducing CO2 mobility


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Bailian Chen ◽  
Rajesh Pawar

Summary Carbon dioxide (CO2) enhanced oil recovery (EOR) is considered one of the technologies to help promote larger scale deployment of geologic CO2 storage because of associated economic benefits through CO2 storage, associated benefits of oil recovery, and the 45Q tax credit (a tax incentive that would reduce CO2 emission in the United States) as well as potential for utilization of existing infrastructure. The objective of this study is to demonstrate how optimal operation strategies (including well completions and controls) can be used to optimize both CO2 storage and oil recovery. The optimization problem was focused on joint estimation of well completions (i.e., fraction of injection/production well perforations in each reservoir layer) and CO2 injection/oil production controls [i.e., rates or bottomhole pressures (BHPs)] that maximize the net present value (NPV) in a combined CO2-EOR and CO2 storage operation. We used the newly developed stochastic simplex approximate gradient (StoSAG), one of the most efficient optimization algorithms in the reservoir optimization community, to solve the optimization problem. The performance of the joint optimization approach was compared with the performance of the well-control-only optimization approach. The superiority of joint optimization was demonstrated with two examples. In addition, the performance of co-optimization of CO2 storage and oil recovery approach was compared with the performances of maximization of only CO2 storage and maximization of only oil recovery approaches.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (17) ◽  
pp. 7907
Author(s):  
Hye-Seung Lee ◽  
Jinhyung Cho ◽  
Young-Woo Lee ◽  
Kun-Sang Lee

Injecting CO2, a greenhouse gas, into the reservoir could be beneficial economically, by extracting remaining oil, and environmentally, by storing CO2 in the reservoir. CO2 captured from various sources always contains various impurities that affect the gas–oil system in the reservoir, changing oil productivity and CO2 geological storage performance. Therefore, it is necessary to examine the effect of impurities on both enhanced oil recovery (EOR) and carbon capture and storage (CCS) performance. For Canada Weyburn W3 fluid, a 2D compositional simulation of water-alternating-gas (WAG) injection was conducted to analyze the effect of impure CO2 on EOR and CCS performance. Most components in the CO2 stream such as CH4, H2, N2, O2, and Ar can unfavorably increase the MMP between the oil and gas mixture, while H2S decreased the MMP. MMP changed according to the type and concentration of impurity in the CO2 stream. Impurities in the CO2 stream also decreased both sweep efficiency and displacement efficiency, increased the IFT between gas and reservoir fluid, and hindered oil density reduction. The viscous gravity number increased by 59.6%, resulting in a decrease in vertical sweep efficiency. In the case of carbon storage, impurities decreased the performance of residual trapping by 4.1% and solubility trapping by 5.6% compared with pure CO2 WAG. As a result, impurities in CO2 reduced oil recovery by 9.2% and total CCS performance by 4.3%.


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