Temperature Dependence of the Shear-Thinning Behavior o Partially Hydrolyzed Polyacrylamide Solution for Enhanced Oil Recovery

2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pan-Sang Kang ◽  
Jong-Se Lim ◽  
Chun Huh

Abstract The viscosity of injection fluid is a critical parameter that should be considered for the design and evaluation of polymer flood, which is an effective and popular technique for enhanced oil recovery (EOR). It is known that the shear-thinning behavior of EOR polymer solutions is affected by temperature. In this study, temperature dependence (25–70 °C) of the viscosity of a partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide solution, the most widely used EOR polymer for oil field applications, was measured under varying conditions of the polymer solution (polymer concentration: 500–3000 ppm, NaCl salinity: 1000–10,000 ppm). Under all conditions of the polymer solution, it was observed that the viscosity decreases with increasing temperature. The degree of temperature dependence, however, varies with the conditions of the polymer solution. Martin model and Lee correlations were used to estimate the dependence of the viscosity of the polymer solution on the polymer concentration and salinity. In this study, we proposed a new empirical model to better elucidate the temperature dependence of intrinsic viscosity. Analysis of the measured viscosities shows that the accuracy of the proposed temperature model is higher than that of the existing temperature model.

1981 ◽  
Vol 21 (05) ◽  
pp. 623-631 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.S. Ward ◽  
F. David Martin

Abstract Loss of solution viscosity in water of increasing ionic strength is a major problem encountered in the use of the partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide polymers for improved oil recovery. It is recognized widely that the viscosity loss is more drastic in the presence of multivalent cations than is observed for sodium ions. There is, however, little information available on the relationships between total ionic strength, concentrations of multivalent cations, and solution viscosities.The purpose of this study is to establish relationships between total ionic strength, concentration of calcium or magnesium ions, polymer concentration, and the resulting viscosity for partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamides with varying degrees of hydrolysis. Solutions at constant ionic strength with varying ratios of calcium or magnesium to sodium ions are compared, and the loss of viscosity as a function of the fraction of divalent cations in the system is determined. For shear rates in the power-law region, the fractional loss in viscosity is a function of the fraction of multivalent cations and, in the range studied, is independent of the total ionic strength. A more complicated relationship is found at lower shear rates where the fractional viscosity loss does vary with total ionic strength.The relationship in the power-law region should prove valuable in predicting viscosities on the basis of the dependence of viscosity on ionic strength and on multivalent cation concentration at a single ionic strength, eliminating the need for many individual measurements of viscosity. More work is needed before useful predictions will be possible at lower shear rates. Introduction Partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide (HPAM) polymers are currently the most widely used mobility control polymers for secondary and tertiary oil recovery. Small quantities of HPAM can increase the viscosity of water by two or more orders of magnitude in the absence of added electrolytes. This phenomenal increase in viscosity results from the extremely high molecular weight of these polymers and repulsion between the negative charges along the polymer chain, resulting in maximum chain extension. The latter mechanism leads to one of the greater disadvantages of using HPAM in an oil reservoir. In the presence of the electrolyte molecules in typical oilfield brines, negative charges along the polymer chain are screened from each other by association with cations from the solution. The polymer chains no longer are extended fully, and solution viscosity decreases. Mungan observed that divalent cations have a more pronounced effect on viscosity than univalent cations when compared on the basis of equal weights of the chloride salts.Viscosities have been reported for HPAM solutions in sodium chloride brines of varying strength as well as for solutions in brines containing CaCl2 or MgCl2. Some viscosities also have been reported for solutions in brines containing both sodium and calcium ions, but no systematic study of the viscosity trends in brines with more than one type of cation has been reported.The purpose of this study is to investigate HPAM solutions with varying ratios of univalent to divalent cations and to establish trends of the solution viscosities for different values of degree of polymer hydrolysis, polymer concentration, and total ionic strength. Such trends are useful for predicting a wide range of viscosities from a few basic measurements. SPEJ P. 623^


2012 ◽  
Vol 512-515 ◽  
pp. 2439-2442 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Wang ◽  
Bao Wei Su ◽  
Xue Li Gao

Polyacrylamide (PAM) is an important polymer for oilfield flooding. The viscosity of PAM solution is very significant for polymer flooding to enhance oil recovery. The main factors which influence viscosity of PAM solution including polymer concentration, temperature, stirring rate, TDS and divalent cation ions were studied. The results showed that high stirring rate will reduce the viscosity of PAM solution; and the viscosity decreases gradually with temperature increasing; TDS and divalent cation ions also affect the viscosity of polymer solution greatly, the viscosity loss is more than 3% with the TDS increases by 1000 mg/L under the same concentration of divalent cation ions; the viscosity loss is around 20% with the concentration of divalent cation ions increase by 100 mg/L.


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