scholarly journals Relationship between Blocking Performance and Foam Texture in Porous Media

Geofluids ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Zhuangzhuang Wang ◽  
Zhaomin Li ◽  
Hailong Chen ◽  
Fei Wang ◽  
Dawei Hou ◽  
...  

Foam is widely used as a selective blocking agent through mobility control in oil field development. Its flow behavior in porous media has been investigated sufficiently, but few studies were carried out to understand the change of foam texture in flow. In this work, sandpack and micromodel experiments were conducted simultaneously to analyze foam flow behavior from the perspective of foam texture. Based on the measured flowing pressure and the observed foam image, the correlation between blocking pressure and foam texture was quantitatively investigated. The blocking pressure has a strong correlation with average diameter (-0.906) and variation coefficient (-0.78) and has a positive correlation with the filling ratio (0.84). These indicate that the blocking performance of foam is influenced by its texture closely. But path analysis shows only that the average diameter and variation coefficient have a significant direct effect on blocking pressure (-0.624 and -0.404). These show that the blocking capacity of foam is mainly influenced by the size and uniformity of bubbles. Tiny, dense, and homogeneous foam has a stronger blocking capacity. This study provides a deep insight of foam flow in porous media.

Polymers ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 1225 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiankang Xin ◽  
Gaoming Yu ◽  
Zhangxin Chen ◽  
Keliu Wu ◽  
Xiaohu Dong ◽  
...  

The flow of polymer solution and heavy oil in porous media is critical for polymer flooding in heavy oil reservoirs because it significantly determines the polymer enhanced oil recovery (EOR) and polymer flooding efficiency in heavy oil reservoirs. In this paper, physical experiments and numerical simulations were both applied to investigate the flow of partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide (HPAM) solution and heavy oil, and their effects on polymer flooding in heavy oil reservoirs. First, physical experiments determined the rheology of the polymer solution and heavy oil and their flow in porous media. Then, a new mathematical model was proposed, and an in-house three-dimensional (3D) two-phase polymer flooding simulator was designed considering the non-Newtonian flow. The designed simulator was validated by comparing its results with those obtained from commercial software and typical polymer flooding experiments. The developed simulator was further applied to investigate the non-Newtonian flow in polymer flooding. The experimental results demonstrated that the flow behavior index of the polymer solution is 0.3655, showing a shear thinning; and heavy oil is a type of Bingham fluid that overcomes a threshold pressure gradient (TPG) to flow in porous media. Furthermore, the validation of the designed simulator was confirmed to possess high accuracy and reliability. According to its simulation results, the decreases of 1.66% and 2.49% in oil recovery are caused by the difference between 0.18 and 1 in the polymer solution flow behavior indexes of the pure polymer flooding (PPF) and typical polymer flooding (TPF), respectively. Moreover, for heavy oil, considering a TPG of 20 times greater than its original value, the oil recoveries of PPF and TPF are reduced by 0.01% and 5.77%, respectively. Furthermore, the combined effect of shear thinning and a threshold pressure gradient results in a greater decrease in oil recovery, with 1.74% and 8.35% for PPF and TPF, respectively. Thus, the non-Newtonian flow has a hugely adverse impact on the performance of polymer flooding in heavy oil reservoirs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 339
Author(s):  
I. Carneiro ◽  
M. Borges ◽  
S. Malta

In this work,we present three-dimensional numerical simulations of water-oil flow in porous media in order to analyze the influence of the heterogeneities in the porosity and permeability fields and, mainly, their relationships upon the phenomenon known in the literature as viscous fingering. For this, typical scenarios of heterogeneous reservoirs submitted to water injection (secondary recovery method) are considered. The results show that the porosity heterogeneities have a markable influence in the flow behavior when the permeability is closely related with porosity, for example, by the Kozeny-Carman (KC) relation.This kind of positive relation leads to a larger oil recovery, as the areas of high permeability(higher flow velocities) are associated with areas of high porosity (higher volume of pores), causing a delay in the breakthrough time. On the other hand, when both fields (porosity and permeability) are heterogeneous but independent of each other the influence of the porosity heterogeneities is smaller and may be negligible.


Author(s):  
Amir Riaz ◽  
Yildiray Cinar ◽  
Hamdi Tchelepi

Multiphase flow in porous media is fundamentally a microscopic process that governs the behavior of geologic scale processes. The application of existing (standard) macroscopic models to problems of geologic scale multiphase flow has proved to be unsatisfactory within a wide range of governing parameters. Our objective is to develop the missing link between the fundamental physics of multiphase flow at the pore-scale and the phenomenological representation of dynamic behaviors across a hierarchy of geologic scales. An essential prerequisite to such an analysis is a qualitative understanding of the flow behavior in terms of flow structures that exist for various parameter combination within the regime of CO2 sequestration. An experimental study addressing these objectives is presented. Experiments are carried out at the laboratory scale in a vertical glass-bead pack, in the parameter range of sequestration flows. Experimental results are interpreted with the help of invasion percolation models.


2020 ◽  
Vol 400 ◽  
pp. 38-44
Author(s):  
Hassan Soleimani ◽  
Hassan Ali ◽  
Noorhana Yahya ◽  
Beh Hoe Guan ◽  
Maziyar Sabet ◽  
...  

This article studies the combined effect of spatial heterogeneity and capillary pressure on the saturation of two fluids during the injection of immiscible nanoparticles. Various literature review exhibited that the nanoparticles are helpful in enhancing the oil recovery by varying several mechanisms, like wettability alteration, interfacial tension, disjoining pressure and mobility control. Multiphase modelling of fluids in porous media comprise balance equation formulation, and constitutive relations for both interphase mass transfer and pressure saturation curves. A classical equation of advection-dispersion is normally used to simulate the fluid flow in porous media, but this equation is unable to simulate nanoparticles flow due to the adsorption effect which happens. Several modifications on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) have been made to increase the number of unknown variables. The simulation results indicated the successful transportation of nanoparticles in two phase fluid flow in porous medium which helps in decreasing the wettability of rocks and hence increasing the oil recovery. The saturation, permeability and capillary pressure curves show that the wettability of the rocks increases with the increasing saturation of wetting phase (brine).


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haishan Luo ◽  
Kun Ma ◽  
Khalid Mateen ◽  
Guangwei Ren ◽  
Gilles Bourdarot ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rouhollah Farajzadeh ◽  
RM Muruganathan ◽  
Rumen Krastev ◽  
William Richard Rossen

1979 ◽  
Vol 19 (06) ◽  
pp. 369-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.A. Alvarado ◽  
S.S. Marsden

Abstract The flow of oil-in-water macroemulsions through both porous media and capillary tubes has been studied experimentally and described mathematically. Macroemulsions are those emulsions with most of their droplet diameters greater than I AM, which is the same order of magnitude as the pore constrictions. The emulsions were pumped with a positive displacement pump through several porous media and capillary tubes connected in series. The rheological behavior of macroemulsions with oil concentrations ranging from 10 to 70 vol% was obtained using capillary tube data. Emulsions with oil concentrations less than 50% behaved like Newtonian fluids, white those with concentrations greater than 50% behaved like pseudoplastic fluids. Viscoelastic effects were not observed for these fluids. A correlation, which uses both capillary and core flow data, was developed for describing the flow of non-Newtonian macroemulsions through porous media. This led to a general equation that reduced to Darcy's law for Newtonian fluids. The average relative error found when applying the method of correlation was +/- 4 %. Introduction The subject of emulsions is a broad field that includes many instances of application in industry. We are interested mainly in one specific area of application here - the oil industry. The study of emulsions has received considerable attention in petroleum research laboratories during the past 15 petroleum research laboratories during the past 15 years. The development of new methods of secondary recovery and the potential application of crude oil transportation through pipelines as stable emulsions have increased the number of research programs dealing with emulsions. programs dealing with emulsions. Macroemulsions, or ordinary emulsions, are dispersions of one liquid within another liquid. third component in an emulsion is the emulsifying agent or emulsifier, which has two principal functions:to decrease the interfacial tension between the liquids, thereby enabling easier formation of the greatly extended interface, andto stabilize the dispersed phase against coalescence once it is formed. With water or brine as one of the liquids, two types of emulsions are possible - oil-in-water (O/W) and water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions. Note that most of worlds's crude oil is produced in emulsion form. These emulsions are generally water-in-crude oil emulsions, which are more viscous than either of their constituents. Since we are interested only in maximum economical oil production, it is a common practice to separate emulsions production, it is a common practice to separate emulsions into their components, thereby obtaining reduced viscosity. This is accomplished in the oil field by using chemical and heat treatments. In contrast to W/O emulsions, O/W emulsions have lower viscosities than their oil constituent. This was considered by some investigators during the development of systems for producing and transporting crude oil as O/W emulsions. During the last decade or so, a number of new secondary oil recovery processes have been developed. These methods include the use of high-viscosity emulsions to displace oil, the use of emulsion slugs between the displacing fluid (water) and the displaced fluid (Oil), and controlled viscosity microemulsions. We see that, for an engineer to describe properly the flow behavior of emulsions in both pipelines and reservoirs, he must know the properties of emulsions and the physical laws properties of emulsions and the physical laws controlling their flow through tubes and porous media. The purpose of this research was to study the flow of O/W macroemulsions through both porous media and capillary tubes. The rheological characteristics of emulsions were analyzed by using capillary viscometers. SPEJ P. 369


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Simjoo ◽  
Yufei Dong ◽  
Alexey Andrianov ◽  
Mohand Talanana ◽  
Pacelli L.J. Zitha

1967 ◽  
Vol 7 (04) ◽  
pp. 359-368 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.H. Raza ◽  
S.S. Marsden

Abstract An experimental study of the flow of fine-textured, aqueous foams through Pyrex tubes is described. The foams range in quality F (ratio of gas volume to total volume) from 0.70 to 0.96 and behave like pseudoplastic fluids. At lower flow rates they exhibit laminar flow and have apparent viscosities which increase with quality, and which cover a range of 15 cp to 255 poise for tubes of 0.25- to 1.50-mm radius ri. At higher flow rates a plug-like type of flow is developed, the extent of which increases with both and ri. When the same foams flow through either open or packed Pyrex tubes, remarkably high streaming potentials phi E are often generated. These can easily reach 50v if nonionic foaming agents are used, but are at least an order of magnitude less for ionic foaming agents. A linear relationship between phi E and the pressure differential phi p is observed; this usually extrapolates to positive values of phi p at phi E of zero. The slope of the line increases with both F and ri. An equation was derived to describe the streaming potential of non-Newtonian fluids in circular tubes and was used to correlate experimental results. The calculated potential is are of the right order of magnitude. Introduction Foams are both unusual and intriguing in their physical properties, and have been the subject of many scientific studies. However, present knowledge of foams is still fragmentary, specific and often contradictory. Apparent viscosity of foam is the physical property of greatest interest to both rheologists and engineers. Sibree reported that the apparent viscosity decreased with increasing shear rate in a manner similar to some non-Newtonian fluids. Penny and Blackman reported that fire-fighting foams had both a limiting shear stress and a tensile yield stress. There is little doubt that some foams at least behave like non-Newtonian fluids, and have apparent viscosities considerably higher than those of either constituent phase. The high apparent viscosity of foam with its concomitant effect on mobility ratio and sweep efficiency no doubt prompted several attempts by research groups to use foam as a displacing agent in porous media. Based on recent experience, most of these groups probably succeeded in completely blocking fluid flow in the porous media and then abandoned their efforts. Two groups apparently found the successful combination of experimental parameters at about the same time. Others have recently added to our knowledge-of foam flow in porous media and its use as a displacing agent. An experimental problem encountered by Fried was a transient blockage of foam flow in porous media when distilled water was used to prepare the foam-producing solution. Fried surmised that this was due to an electrokinetic effect and he eliminated it by using electrolytes in preparing foaming solutions. He also measured the streaming potential of a number of foams in capillary tubes which he found to be appreciably higher than those obtained when the constituent liquid flowed under comparable conditions. This paper presents results of a more comprehensive study of the streaming potential generated by aqueous foam flowing in both open and packed Pyrex tubes. It also adds to knowledge of the rheology of these foams as deduced from their flow behavior in open tubes. APPARATUS AND PROCEDURE A diagram of the apparatus used is shown in Fig. 1. Details of its construction, testing and use are described elsewhere. Careful selection of materials, extreme cleanliness and rather elaborate electrical insulation and shielding were necessary to obtain reproducible results (15 percent). Both streaming potential and streaming current were measured with an electrometer. The design of the foam generator developed for this work is novel (Fig. 2). SPEJ P. 359ˆ


2011 ◽  
Vol 168 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 71-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Farajzadeh ◽  
R.M. Muruganathan ◽  
W.R. Rossen ◽  
R. Krastev

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