Coarsening reduction strategies to stabilize CO2-foam formed with a zwitterionic surfactant in porous media

Author(s):  
Leandro F. Lopes ◽  
Juliana M.F. Façanha ◽  
Luis Maqueira ◽  
Felipe R.T. Ribeiro ◽  
Aurora Pérez-Gramatges
2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (11) ◽  
pp. 14464-14475
Author(s):  
Qichao Lv ◽  
Tongke Zhou ◽  
Rong Zheng ◽  
Xing Zhang ◽  
Zhaoxia Dong ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying Yu ◽  
Alvinda Sri Hanamertani ◽  
Shehzad Ahmed ◽  
Zunsheng Jiao ◽  
Jonathan Fred McLaughlin ◽  
...  

Abstract Injecting carbon dioxide (CO2) as foam during enhanced oil recovery (EOR) can improve injectate mobility and increase sweep efficiency. Integrating CO2-foam techniques with carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) operations is of recent interest, as the mobility control and sweep efficiency increases seen in EOR could also benefit CO2 storage during CCUS. In this study, a variety of different charge, hydrocarbon chain length, head group surfactants were evaluated by surface tension, bulk and dynamic CO2-foam performance assessments for CCUS. The optimal foam candidate was expected to provide satisfying mobility control effects under reservoir conditions, leading to an improved water displacement efficiency during CO2-foam flooding that favors a more significant CO2 storage potential. All tested surfactants were able to lower their surface tensions against scCO2 by 4-5 times, enlarging the surface area of solution/gas contact; therefore, more CO2 could be trapped in the foam system. A zwitterionic surfactant was found to have slightly higher surface tension against CO2 while exhibiting the highest foaming ability and the most prolonged foam stability with a relatively slower drainage rate among all tested surfactants. The dynamic performance of scCO2-foam stabilized by this zwitterionic surfactant was also evaluated in sandstone and carbonate cores at 13.79 MPa and 90°C. The results show that the mobility control development in carbonate core was relatively slower, suggesting a gradual foam generation process attributed to the higher permeability than the case in sandstone core. A more significant cumulative CO2 storage potential improvement, quantified based on the water production, was recorded in sandstone (53%) over the carbonate (47%). Overall, the selected foam has successfully developed CO2 mobility control and improved water displacement in the occurrence of in-situ foam generation, hence promoting the storage capacity for the injected CO2. This work has optimized the foaming agent selection method at the actual reservoir conditions and evaluated the scCO2-foam performance in establishing high flow resistance and improving the CO2 storage capacity, which benefits integrated CCUS studies or projects utilizing CO2-foam techniques.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Yu ◽  
Xianmin Zhou ◽  
Mazen Yousef Kanj

Abstract The foam coarsening process is significant to foam stability in porous media. This study provides, for the first time, direct visualization of the foam coarsening process in porous media under realistic reservoir conditions. Foam coarsening behavior in porous media has shown a similar linear increase in the average bubble area to that in an open system but differs in two stages. The average bubble area increases with a faster rate in stage 1 and then increases with a slower rate in stage 2 and stage 2 dominates the foam coarsening process. The transition between the two stages occurs as the inner bubbles disappear when the edge bubbles start feeling the effects of the walls. The foam at steady-state shows a bimodal size distribution with bubbles trapped in the pore bodies and pore throats. The effects of pore pressure (600-3200 psi) and temperature (22-100 °C) were studied. Foam coarsening dynamics are sensitive to pore pressure and temperature, where higher pore pressure and lower temperature are more favorable to maintain a stable foam. Finally, the coarsening rates of foams generated with different gas phases were compared. In contrast to N2 foam and gas CO2 foam, supercritical CO2 foam exhibits the slowest coarsening rate because of its ultralow interfacial tension.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amit Katiyar ◽  
Troy Knight ◽  
Adam Grzesiak ◽  
Pete Rozowski ◽  
Quoc Nguyen

Abstract Several gas Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) pilots enhanced with aqueous-foam based conformance solutions have been implemented in the last 30 years. While these pilots were technically successful, there were economic challenges limiting their commercial viability. Many of these pilots were implemented with water-soluble foaming surfactants that can get adversely affected by near wellbore gas-water gravity segregation and adsorption loss up to 90% of the injected surfactant. Novel, gas-soluble surfactants can be injected with the gas phase where these surfactants are carried with the gas to thief zones faster and deeper with relatively lower adsorption to the rock surface. However, the conventional foam modeling approach relied only on the surfactant concentration in brine to determine foam strength, which adversely predicted the performance of gas soluble surfactants. With proven laboratory evaluations and multiple successful field implementations, the advantages of low adsorbing and gas soluble surfactants cannot be ignored. In this paper, the advantages of surfactant partitioning to the gas phase are confirmed by correcting the conventional foam modeling approach while simulating 1D transport of CO2-foam displacing brine in porous media. An empirical foam model was developed from the lab scale core flooding work of CO2foam transport through porous media using a novel gas-soluble foaming surfactant. While investigating the performance of gas soluble surfactants, global surfactant concentration was used to determine foam strength as the surfactant can transport to the gas-water interface from both the phases. Lab experiments and simulations with an improved foam modeling approach confirmed that a higher gas phase partitioning surfactant generated robust foam and deeper foam propagation while injecting surfactant with CO2in a water saturated core. In addition, comparing three partition coefficient scenarios around 1 on mass basis, the higher gas phase partitioning surfactant showed the larger delay in gas breakthrough. Overall, the simulation results with our better modeling approach do support the advantages of the higher gas phase surfactant partitioning in deeper foam transport and conformance enhancement for the gas-EOR technology.


2011 ◽  
Vol 221 ◽  
pp. 15-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Xing Du ◽  
Ying Ge Li ◽  
Shi Jiao Sun

There are many attractive features for using CO2 foam injection in Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) processes. For understanding CO2 foam rheology in porous media, an experimental study is reported in this paper concerning CO2 film foam flow characteristics in a vertical straight tube. Foam is treated as non-Newtonian fluid and its pseudo-plastic behavior is investigated based on power law constitutive model. It is observed the CO2 film foam flow shows clear shear-thinning behavior, with flow consistency coefficient of K=0.15 and flow behavior index of n=0.48. The apparent viscosity of flowing CO2 film foam is under the shear rate of 50s-1 and under the shear rate of 1000s-1, which are 19 and 3 times higher than the single phase water. It is also found CO2 foam has lower apparent viscosity than the foam with air as the internal gas phase, which is in consistence with experimental observations for lower CO2 foam flow resistance in porous media.


Fuel ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 126 ◽  
pp. 104-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianjia Yu ◽  
Munawar Khalil ◽  
Ning Liu ◽  
Robert Lee

2015 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 1119-1126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dongxing Du ◽  
Shengbin Sun ◽  
Na Zhang ◽  
Weifeng Lv ◽  
Dexi Wang ◽  
...  

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