More Residual Crude Oil Can Be Displaced Out by Micro-Forces in Chemical Flooding

Author(s):  
Huifen Xia ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Gang Wang ◽  
Yanming An
Keyword(s):  
2013 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 32-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michal Porzer ◽  
Petr Bujok ◽  
Martin Klempa ◽  
Petr Pánek

Abstract This paper focuses on the field of enhanced oil recovery by means of a chemical flooding of oil deposit especially a surfactant flooding method. The main objective is the application of the aforementioned method at the Czech oil deposit Ždánice - Miocene which bears the crude oil of significant viscosity and gravity that does not allow conventional production methods to be used. We evaluated the performance of various surfactants in the laboratory environment by simulating oil recovery processes


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 257-267
Author(s):  
Yongqiang Bai ◽  
Yang Chunmei ◽  
Liu Mei ◽  
Jiang Zhenxue

Enhanced oil recovery (EOR) provides a significant contribution for increasing output of crude oil. Alkaline-surfactant-polymer (ASP), as an effective chemical method of EOR, has played an important role in advancing crude oil output of the Daqing oilfield, China. Chemical flooding utilized in the process of ASP EOR has produced concerned damage to the reservoir, especially from the strong alkali of ASP, and variations of micropore structure of sandstones in the oil reservoirs restrain output of crude oil in the late stages of oilfield development. Laboratory flooding experiments were conducted to study sandstones’ micropore structure behavior at varying ASP flooding stages. Qualitative and quantitative analysis by cast thin section, scanning electric microscopy (SEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM) and electron probe X-Ray microanalysis (EPMA) explain the mechanisms of sandstones’ micropore structure change. According to the quantitative analysis, as the ASP dose agent increases, the pore width and pore depth exhibit a tendency of decrease-increase-decrease, and the specific ASP flooding stage is found in which flooding stage is most affective from the perspective of micropore structures. With the analysis of SEM images and variations of mineral compositions of samples, the migration of intergranular particles, the corrosions of clay, feldspar and quartz, and formation of new intergranular substances contribute to the alterations of sandstone pore structure. Results of this study provide significant guidance for further application to ASP flooding.


1982 ◽  
Vol 22 (04) ◽  
pp. 472-480 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.L. Enedy ◽  
S.M. Farouq Ali ◽  
C.D. Stahl

Abstract This investigation focused on developing an efficient chemical flooding process by use of dilute surfactant/polymer slugs. The competing roles of interfacial tension (IFT) and equivalent weight (EW) of the surfactant used, as well as the effect of different types of preflushes on tertiary oil recovery, were studied. Volume of residual oil recovered per gram of surfactant used was examined as a function of these variables and slug size. Tertiary oil recovery increased with an increase in the dilute surfactant slug size and buffer viscosity. However, low IFT does not ensure high oil recovery. An increase in surfactant EW used actually can lead to a decrease in oil recovery. Tertiary oil recovery was also sensitive to preflush type. Reasons for the observed behavior are examined in relation to the surfactant properties as well as to adsorption and retention. Introduction Two approaches are being used in development of surfactant /polymer-type chemical floods:a small-PV slug of high surfactant concentration, ora large-PV slug of low surfactant concentration. This study deals with the latter-i.e., dilute aqueous slugs (with polymer added in many cases) containing less than or equal 2.0 wt% sulfonates and about 0. 1 wt% crude oil. Because the dilute slug contains little of the dispersed phase, an aqueous surfactant slug usually is unable to displace the oil miscibly; however, residual brine is miscible with the slug if the inorganic salt concentration is not excessive. The dilute, aqueous petroleum sulfonate slug lowers the oil/water IFT. overcoming capillary forces. This process commonly is referred to as locally immiscible oil displacement. Objectives The objective of this work was to develop an efficient dilute surfactant/polymer slug for the Bradford crude with a variety of sulfonate combinations. Effects of varying the slug characteristics such as equivalent weight, IFT, salt concentration, etc. on tertiary oil recovery were examined. Materials and Experimental Details The petroleum sulfonates and the dilute slugs used in this study are listed in Tables 1 and 2, respectively. The crude oil tested was Bradford crude 144 degrees API (0.003 g/cm3), 4 cp (0.004 Pa.s)]. The polymer solutions were prefiltered and driven by brines of various concentrations (0.02, 1.0, and 2.0% NACl). In many cases, the polymer was added to the slug. Conventional coreflood equipment described in Ref. 3 was used. Berea sandstone cores (unfired) 2 in, (5 cm) in diameter and 4 ft (1.3 m) in length were used for all tests, with a new core for each test. Porosity ranged from 19.3 to 21.0%, permeability averaged 203 md, and the waterflood residual oil saturation averaged 33.1%. IFT's were measured by the spinning drop method. Viscosities were measured with a Brookfield viscosimeter and are reported here for 6 rpm (0.1 rev/s). The dilute slugs containing polymer exhibited non-Newtonian behavior. Without polymer the behavior was Newtonian. Sulfonate concentration in the oleic phase was determined by an infrared spectrophotometer, while the concentration in the aqueous phase was measured by ultraviolet (UV) absorbance analysis. Discussion of Results Slug development in this investigation was an evolutionary process. Dilute slugs were developed and core tested in a sequential manner (Table 2). Slugs 100 through 200 yielded insignificant ternary oil recoveries (largely because of excessive adsorption and retention), but the results helped determine improvements in slug compositions and in the overall chemical flood. This paper gives results for the more efficient slugs only. SPEJ P. 472^


Author(s):  
Bo Peng ◽  
Jixiang Guo ◽  
Zhaoxia Dong ◽  
Mingyuan Li ◽  
Zhaoliang Wu ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 518 ◽  
pp. 3-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi Zhang ◽  
Hua Long Liu ◽  
You Yi Zhu ◽  
Hong Yuan ◽  
Jie Wu

In order to meet the demand of a quantitative evaluation the emulsifying properties of crude oil for the chemical flooding, based on the comparative analysis of relevant methods and standards, through a large number of experimental studies, a quantitative test methods and emulsifying power of the emulsion stability were established, the concept of the emulsion integrated index was definition, a quantitative evaluation method and the evaluation of the overall performance of the crude oil emulsion grade were put forward in this paper. The method takes into account the emulsification speed and persistence of the emulsifier. The method has been included in China's petroleum industry standard, and gives a technological support for the application in the comprehensive evaluation of the displacing agent in the petroleum industry.


SPE Journal ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 21 (01) ◽  
pp. 32-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aboulghasem Kazemi Korrani ◽  
Kamy Sepehrnoori ◽  
Mojdeh Delshad

Summary Mechanistic simulation of alkaline/surfactant/polymer (ASP) flooding considers chemical reactions between the alkali and the oil to form in-situ soap and reactions between the alkali and the minerals and brine. A comprehensive mechanistic modeling of such process remains a challenge, mainly caused by the complicated ASP phase behavior and the complexity of geochemical reactions that occur in the reservoir. Because of the lack of the microemulsion phase and/or lack of reactions that may lead to the consumption of alkali and resulting lag in the pH, a simplified ASP phase behavior is often used. A state-of-the-art geochemical package, IPhreeqc, of the United States Geological Survey was coupled with UTCHEM, an in-house research chemical-flooding reservoir simulator developed at The University of Texas at Austin (UT), for a robust, flexible, and accurate integrated tool to mechanistically model ASP floods. UTCHEM has a comprehensive three-phase (water, oil, microemulsion) flash package for the mixture of surfactant and soap as a function of salinity, temperature, and cosolvent concentration. Through this integrated tool, we are able to simulate homogeneous and heterogeneous (mineral dissolution/precipitation), irreversible, surface complexation, and ion exchange reactions under nonisothermal, nonisobaric, and both local-equilibrium and kinetic conditions. Italic words are defined in Appendix A. IPhreeqc has rich databases of chemical species and also the flexibility to include the alkaline reactions required for modeling ASP floods. Hence, to the best of our knowledge, for the first time, the important aspects of ASP flooding are considered. An algorithm is presented for modeling the geochemistry in an implicit-in-pressure-and-explicit-in-concentration solution algorithm. Finally, we show how to apply the integrated tool, UTCHEM-IPhreeqc, to match three different reaction-related chemical-flooding processes: ASP flooding in an acidic active crude oil, ASP flooding in a nonacidic crude oil, and alkaline/cosolvent/polymer flooding.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mojtaba Kanani ◽  
Amir Hossein Mohammadi Alamooti ◽  
Mohammad Hossein Ghazanfari ◽  
Cyrus Ghotbi

Abstract Despite numerous studies, fundamental understanding of how pore-level displacements in heavy crude oil–water/chemicals systems are controlled by ultrasonic radiation is not well understood, especially for heterogeneous porous media. In this study, a series of water/chemical flooding were performed on a heterogeneous rock-look-alike micromodel, which was initially saturated with the crude oil, and the pore-level displacements in the presence of ultrasounds are investigated. It has been observed that although the ultrasounds improve the recovery of oil adhered to the pores’ walls, the bypassed oil in the case of injection of surfactant and polymer solutions is relatively high. For the case of water injection, depending on frequency, the ultrasounds can profoundly improve the recovery efficiency up to 17% in comparison to the absence of ultrasounds by peristaltic movement of oil on the walls and forming the ganglia in invading phase, which first affect the minor fingers and then influence the major fingers by developing them through the untouched pores. In addition, some analyses on fingers development during water/chemical injections are presented. The results of this work help to better understand the role of ultrasound on displacement patterns in crude oil–water/chemical systems.


SPE Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (06) ◽  
pp. 3494-3506
Author(s):  
Jeffrey G. Southwick ◽  
Carl van Rijn ◽  
Esther van den Pol ◽  
Diederik van Batenburg ◽  
Arif Azhan ◽  
...  

Summary A low-complexity chemical flooding formulation has been developed for application in offshore environments. The formulation uses seawater with no additional water treatment beyond that which is normally performed for waterflooding (filtration, deoxygenation, etc.). The formulation is a mixture of an alkyl propoxy sulfate (APS) and an alkyl ethoxy sulfate (AES) with no cosolvent. With seawater only (no salinity gradient), the blend of APS and AES gives substantially higher oil recovery than a blend of APS and internal olefin sulfonate (IOS) in outcrop sandstone. This formulation also reduces complexity, increases robustness, and potentially improves project economics for onshore projects as well. It is shown that the highest oil recovery is obtained with surfactant blends that produce formulations that are underoptimum (Winsor Type I phase behavior) with reservoir crude oil. Also, these underoptimum formulations avoid the high-injection pressures that are seen with optimum formulations in low-permeability outcrop rock. The formulation recovers a similar amount of oil in reservoir rock in the swept zone. Overall recovery in reservoir rock is lower than outcrop sandstone due to greater heterogeneity, which causes bypassing of crude oil. A successful formulation was developed by first screening surfactants for phase behavior then fine tuning the formulation based on insights developed with corefloods in consistent outcrop rocks. The consistency of the outcrop is essential to understand cause and effect. Then, final floods were performed in reservoir rock to confirm that low interfacial tension (IFT) is propagated through the core.


2009 ◽  
Vol 12 (05) ◽  
pp. 713-723 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam Flaaten ◽  
Quoc P. Nguyen ◽  
Gary A. Pope ◽  
Jieyuan Zhang

Summary We present a systematic study of laboratory tests of alternative chemical formulations for a chemical flood design and application. Aqueous and microemulsion phase behavior tests have previously been shown to be a rapid, inexpensive, and highly effective means to select the best chemicals and minimize the need for relatively expensive coreflood tests. Microemulsion phase behavior testing was therefore conducted using various combinations of surfactants, cosolvents, and alkalis with a particular crude oil and in reservoir conditions of interest. Branched alcohol propoxy sulfates and internal olefin sulfonates showed high performance in these tests, even when mixed with both conventional and novel alkali agents. Systematic screening methods helped tailor and fine tune chemical mixtures to perform well under the given design constraints. The best chemical formulations were validated in coreflood experiments, and compared in terms of both oil recovery and surfactant retention in cores. Each of the four best formulations tested in corefloods gave nearly 100% oil recovery and very low surfactant adsorption. The two formulations with conventional and novel alkali agents gave almost zero surfactant retention. In standard practice, soft water must be used with alkali, but we show how alkali-surfactant-polymer (ASP) flooding can be used in this case even with very hard saline brine. Introduction Many mature reservoirs under waterflood have low economic production rates despite having as much as 50 to 75% of the original oil still in place. These reservoirs are viable candidates for chemical enhanced oil recovery (EOR) that uses both surfactant to reduce oil/water interfacial tension (IFT) and polymer to improve sweep efficiency. However, designing these aqueous chemical mixtures is complex and must be tailored to the reservoir rock and fluid (i.e., crude oil and formation brine) properties of the application. The early success of a systematic laboratory approach to low-cost, high performance chemical flooding depends on the efficiency of designing a formula for coreflood injection in accordance with sound evaluation criteria. A general, a three-stage procedure has been developed previously to screen hundreds of potential chemicals (i.e., surfactant, cosurfactant, cosolvent, alkali, polymer, and electrolytes), and arrive at a mixture having good recovery of residual oil in cores (Jackson 2006; Levitt 2006; Levitt et al. 2006). Additionally, furthering laboratory and field-testing in this area contributes to an expanding research database to help broaden reservoir types that can become candidates for routine chemical EOR application. This paper describes a systematic laboratory approach to low cost, high performance chemical flooding, and explores novel approaches to ASP flooding in reservoirs containing very hard saline brines. The design strategy first uses microemulsion phase behavior experiments to quickly select and optimize concentrations of injected chemicals. Assessment of formula optimization strategies are carried out through varying surfactant-to-cosurfactant ratio, reducing cosolvent concentration, reducing total surfactant concentration, selecting a suitable alkali, and using formation brine in the injection mixture. Formulations performing well in phase behavior are validated in coreflood experiments that adhere to necessary design criteria such as pressure and salinity gradients, surfactant adsorption, and capillary effects. We illustrate the application of our design approach in prepared Berea sandstone cores previously waterflooded with very hard saline brine, and show how ASP flooding can use some of the same brine in the chemical formulation. Conventional ASP flooding requires soft water that may not always be available, and softening hard brines can be very costly or infeasible in many cases depending on the location and other factors. These new results demonstrate high tolerance to both salinity and hardness of the high performance surfactants, and how novel alkalis--in particular sodium metaborate--can provide similar benefits in such harsh environments as sodium carbonate has shown in environments without divalent cations. This experimental success begins to vastly increase the range of conditions for economical EOR using chemicals.


2019 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 571-576
Author(s):  
Ahmed Sony ◽  
Hamdan Suhaimi ◽  
Laili Che Rose

A group of chemicals known as surfactants are widely used in industries. Their presence in any formulation, albeit little, exhibited superior functionality of the end-products. The dual hydrophobic and hydrophilic moiety of the structure have been shown to be responsible for reduction of surface/ interfacial tension and formation of micelles. In this work, a chemical flooding method using sodium dodecyl sulphate, SDS and its mixture with gum arabic, were carried out to study the recovery and efficiency of extracting the residual oil from the oil reservoirs. Two sets of experiments namely SDS and its mixture with gum arabic flooding at concentrations of SDS between 0.1-0.6 percent by weight are conducted. The percentage of gum arabic used is 16 percent by weight. Results shows that the use of SDS-Gum arabic flooding method yielded higher extraction of oil about 4.0 percent compared to SDS flooding. This suggests that the use of SDS and gum Arabic mixture is more efficient in increasing the amount of oil recovery.


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