Mechanistic study of the wettability alteration induced by preformed particle gel (PPG) in carbonate reservoirs

2021 ◽  
Vol 328 ◽  
pp. 115422
Author(s):  
Pourya Malmir ◽  
Abdolnabi Hashemi ◽  
Bahram Soltani Soulgani
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Shi ◽  
Kishore Mohanty ◽  
Manmath Panda

Abstract Oil-wetness and heterogeneity (i.e., existence of low and high permeability regions) are two main factors that result in low oil recovery by waterflood in carbonate reservoirs. The injected water is likely to flow through high permeability regions and bypass the oil in low permeability matrix. In this study, systematic coreflood tests were carried out in both "homogeneous" cores and "heterogeneous" cores. The heterogeneous coreflood test was proposed to model the heterogeneity of carbonate reservoirs, bypassing in low-permeability matrix during waterfloods, and dynamic imbibition of surfactant into the low-permeability matrix. The results of homogeneous coreflood tests showed that both secondary-waterflood and secondary-surfactant flood can achieve high oil recovery (>50%) from relatively homogenous cores. A shut-in phase after the surfactant injection resulted in an additional oil recovery, which suggests enough time should be allowed while using surfactants for wettability alteration. The core with a higher extent of heterogeneity produced lower oil recovery to waterflood in the coreflood tests. Final oil recovery from the matrix depends on matrix permeability as well as the rock heterogeneity. The results of heterogeneous coreflood tests showed that a slow surfactant injection (dynamic imbibition) can significantly improve the oil recovery if the oil-wet reservoir is not well-swept.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Ibrahim Mohamed ◽  
Vladimir Alvarado

Abstract A large percentage of petroleum reserves are located in carbonate reservoirs, which can be divided into limestone, chalk and dolomite. Roughly the oil recovery from carbonates is below the 30% due to the strong oil wetness, low permeability, abundance of natural fractures, and inhomogeneous rock properties Austad (2013). Injection of adjusted brine chemistry into carbonate reservoirs has been reported to increase oil recovery by 5-30% of the original oil in place in field tests and core flooding experiments. Previous studies have shown that adjusted waterflooding recovery in carbonate reservoirs is dependent on the composition and ionic strength of the injection brine (Morrow et al. 1998; Zhang 2005). Many research works have focused on the role of the brine composition in altering the initial wettability state of carbonate rock, which is usually intermediate- to oil-wet. Crude oils contain carboxyl group, -COOH, that can be found in the resin and asphaltenes fractions. The negatively charged carboxyl group, -COOH bond very strongly with the positively charged, sites on the carbonate surface. The carbonate surface, which is positively charged is believed to adsorb the SO42− that is negatively charged. On the other side cations Ca2+ and Mg2+ bind to the negatively charged carboxylic group and release it from the surface. In this study we use a closed system geochemical model to study the effect of the surface-charge dominant species; Ca2+, Mg2+ and SO42− on the carbonate surfaces at 80 °C. The proposed geochemical interactions can possibly lead to a change in the surface charge, altering wettability of the rock by exchanging ions/cations. Brines with various concentrations of Mg2+ and SO42− were prepared in the lab and contact angle between carbonate substrate and crude oil was measured using a rising/captive bubble tensiometer at 80 °C. The composition of the carbonate system was collected from previous literature review and the composition of adjusted brines was used to build a surface sorption database to develop a geochemical model. This model is focused on identifying the reaction paths and the surface behavior that may represent the real system. Changes in carbonate surface wettability were further evaluated using a series of contact angle experiments. Experimental observations and modeling results are concordant and imply that SO42− ions may alter the wettability of carbonate surface at high temperature.


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.


SPE Journal ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (04) ◽  
pp. 729-742 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.. Fahimpour ◽  
M.. Jamiolahmady

Summary Significant reduction in well productivity of gas/condensate reservoirs occurs because of reduced gas mobility caused by the presence of condensate/water liquid phases around the wellbore. There are certain fluorinated wettability modifiers that are capable of delivering a good level of oil and water repellency to the rock surface, making it intermediate gas-wet and alleviating such liquid blockages. The main objective of this experimental work has been to evaluate the performance of such chemicals for wettability alteration of carbonate rocks, which have received much less attention in comparison with sandstone rocks. Screening tests, including contact-angle measurements, unsteady-state-flow tests, and compatibility tests with brine, were performed by use of mainly anionic and nonionic fluorosurfactants. Results demonstrated that on positively charged carbonate surfaces, the anionic chemicals were sufficiently effective to repel the liquid phase, whereas the nonionic chemicals showed an excellent stability in brine media. A new approach of combining anionic and nonionic chemical agents was proposed to benefit from these two positive features of an integrated chemical solution. A number of low- and high-permeability carbonate-core samples were successfully treated by use of chemicals selected through screening tests. Optimization of the solution composition and its filtration before injecting it into the core proved very effective in reducing/eliminating the risk of possible permeability damage because of deposition of large chemical aggregates on the rock surface. The chemical solution optimized in this study can be considered as a potential wettability modifier for mitigating the negative impact of condensate/water banking in gas/condensate carbonate reservoirs.


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