scholarly journals A new method for plugging the dominant seepage channel after polymer flooding and its mechanism: Fracturing–seepage–plugging

e-Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 691-701
Author(s):  
Fengjiao Wang ◽  
Xu Wang ◽  
Yikun Liu ◽  
Qingjun Deng ◽  
Dong Zhang

Abstract After polymer flooding, a low-resistant dominant seepage channel forms at the bottom of the high-permeability reservoir, which is extremely disadvantageous for further enhanced oil recovery. In this study, we proposed a new method to plug the dominant seepage channel after polymer flooding, through fracturing–seepage–plugging using a solid-free plugging agent, which can achieve deeper and further regional plugging. This method involved dissolving the crosslinking agent and stabilizer in the water-based fracturing fluid (hereinafter referred to as the fracturing plugging agent) and transporting it to the target reservoir through hydraulic fractures. The fracturing plugging agent percolated into the deep part of the reservoir under the action of fracture closure pressure and gelled with the residual polymer in the formation to achieve deep regional plugging of the advantageous channel. To study the percolation law of fracturing plugging agent in the dominant channel, high-pressure displacement experiments were conducted using natural cores under different permeability and concentration conditions of the fracturing plugging agent. The results showed that the percolation rate of the fracturing plugging agent was almost linearly related to reservoir permeability. Due to the formation of micro-fractures and crosslinking reactions, the percolation rate first increased and then decreased to a stable state. After a certain period, the pores were blocked, resulting in a sharp decrease in the percolation rate and then decayed. In addition, the higher the concentration of fracturing plugging agent, the better the core plugging performance. Moreover, when the concentration of fracturing plugging agent injected into the core exceeded 3,000 mg/L, the core permeability increased, and the breakthrough pressure evidently increased three to four times. On the basis of this, rheometer tests, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) observations, and mercury intrusion tests were performed to evaluate gelation performance, shear effect, and pore retention morphology of the crosslinking system made by mixing the injected plugging agent and residual polymer in the reservoir. The results showed that the shear action could reduce the gelling property, and the concentration of fracturing plugging agent should be >3,000 mg/L to meet the requirements of gelling. Furthermore, the viscosity of the crosslinking system reached the peak value at approximately 72 h, forming a network space structure of layered superposition, thereby increasing viscosity by 40–50 times. Finally, SEM images revealed that after the fracture plugging agent was injected into the core, the micelles were mostly concentrated in the front and middle sections. The average pore radius of the core decreased by 8.620 μm, and the average porosity decreased by 54.85%.

2015 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-13
Author(s):  
Peng Lv ◽  
Mingyuan Li ◽  
Meiqin Lin ◽  
Bo Peng ◽  
Zhaoxia Dong ◽  
...  

Viscosity-concentration and temperature performance are the prerequisite constraint factor of the application of polymer flooding in the oilfield. The static and dynamic adsorption of the polymer in the core can affect the performance of polymer flooding. Based on the viscosity-concentration, temperature and the static, dynamic adsorption results of six kinds of polymers, DQ3500 is chosen as the most suitable polymer for Zahra oilfield. Its affects show that oil recovery is increased by 7% and water cut is reduced by 20%.


SPE Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (01) ◽  
pp. 129-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Juárez-Morejón ◽  
H.. Bertin ◽  
A.. Omari ◽  
G.. Hamon ◽  
C.. Cottin ◽  
...  

Summary An experimental study of polymer flooding is presented here, focusing on the influence of initial core wettability and flood maturity (volume of water injected before polymer injection) on final oil recovery. Experiments were performed using homogeneous Bentheimer Sandstone samples of similar properties. The cores were oilflooded using mineral oil for water-wet conditions and crude oil (after an aging period) for intermediate-wet conditions; the viscosity ratio between oil and polymer was kept constant in all experiments. Polymer, which is a partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide (HPAM), was used at a concentration of 2,500 ppm in a moderate-salinity brine. The polymer solution was injected in the core at different waterflood-maturity times [breakthrough (BT) and 0, 1, 1.75, 2.5, 4, and 6.5 pore volumes (PV)]. Coreflood results show that the maturity of polymer injection plays an important role in final oil recovery, regardless of wettability. The waterflood-maturity time 0 PV (polymer injection without initial waterflooding) leads to the best sweep efficiency, whereas final oil production decreases when the polymer-flood maturity is high (late polymer injection after waterflooding). A difference of 15% in recovery is observed between early polymer flooding (0 PV) and late maturity (6.5 PV). Concerning the effect of wettability, the recovery factor obtained with water-wet cores is always lower (from 10 to 20%, depending on maturity) than the values obtained with intermediate-wet cores, raising the importance of correctly restoring core wettability to obtain representative values of polymer incremental recovery. The influence of wettability can be explained by the oil-phase distribution at the pore scale. Considering that the waterflooding period leads to different values of the oil saturation at which polymer flooding starts, we measured the core dispersivity using a tracer method at different states. The two-phase dispersivity decreases when water saturation increases, which is favorable for polymer sweep. This study shows that in addition to wettability, the maturity of polymer flooding plays a dominant role in oil-displacement efficiency. Final recovery is correlated to the dispersion value at which polymer flooding starts. The highest oil recovery is obtained when the polymer is injected early.


Author(s):  
D.Zh. Akhmed-Zaki ◽  
T.S. Imankulov ◽  
B. Matkerim ◽  
B.S. Daribayev ◽  
K.A. Aidarov ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruissein Mahon ◽  
Gbenga Oluyemi ◽  
Babs Oyeneyin ◽  
Yakubu Balogun

Abstract Polymer flooding is a mature chemical enhanced oil recovery method employed in oilfields at pilot testing and field scales. Although results from these applications empirically demonstrate the higher displacement efficiency of polymer flooding over waterflooding operations, the fact remains that not all the oil will be recovered. Thus, continued research attention is needed to further understand the displacement flow mechanism of the immiscible process and the rock–fluid interaction propagated by the multiphase flow during polymer flooding operations. In this study, displacement sequence experiments were conducted to investigate the viscosifying effect of polymer solutions on oil recovery in sandpack systems. The history matching technique was employed to estimate relative permeability, fractional flow and saturation profile through the implementation of a Corey-type function. Experimental results showed that in the case of the motor oil being the displaced fluid, the XG 2500 ppm polymer achieved a 47.0% increase in oil recovery compared with the waterflood case, while the XG 1000 ppm polymer achieved a 38.6% increase in oil recovery compared with the waterflood case. Testing with the motor oil being the displaced fluid, the viscosity ratio was 136 for the waterflood case, 18 for the polymer flood case with XG 1000 ppm polymer and 9 for the polymer flood case with XG 2500 ppm polymer. Findings also revealed that for the waterflood cases, the porous media exhibited oil-wet characteristics, while the polymer flood cases demonstrated water-wet characteristics. This paper provides theoretical support for the application of polymer to improve oil recovery by providing insights into the mechanism behind oil displacement. Graphic abstract Highlights The difference in shape of relative permeability curves are indicative of the effect of mobility control of each polymer concentration. The water-oil systems exhibited oil-wet characteristics, while the polymer-oil systems demonstrated water-wet characteristics. A large contrast in displacing and displaced fluid viscosities led to viscous fingering and early water breakthrough.


2021 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-178
Author(s):  
Xiangguo LU ◽  
Bao CAO ◽  
Kun XIE ◽  
Weijia CAO ◽  
Yigang LIU ◽  
...  

e-Polymers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-60
Author(s):  
Wenting Dong ◽  
Dong Zhang ◽  
Keliang Wang ◽  
Yue Qiu

AbstractPolymer flooding technology has shown satisfactorily acceptable performance in improving oil recovery from unconsolidated sandstone reservoirs. The adsorption of the polymer in the pore leads to the increase of injection pressure and the decrease of suction index, which affects the effect of polymer flooding. In this article, the water and oil content of polymer blockages, which are taken from Bohai Oilfield, are measured by weighing method. In addition, the synchronous thermal analyzer and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) are used to evaluate the composition and functional groups of the blockage, respectively. Then the core flooding experiments are also utilized to assess the effect of polymer plugs on reservoir properties and optimize the best degradant formulation. The results of this investigation show that the polymer adsorption in core after polymer flooding is 0.0068 g, which results in a permeability damage rate of 74.8%. The degradation ability of the agent consisting of 1% oxidizer SA-HB and 10% HCl is the best, the viscosity of the system decreases from 501.7 to 468.5 mPa‧s.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitry Chuprakov ◽  
Ludmila Belyakova ◽  
Ivan Glaznev ◽  
Aleksandra Peshcherenko

Abstract We developed a high-resolution fracture productivity calculator to enable fast and accurate evaluation of hydraulic fractures modeled using a fine-scale 2D simulation of material placement. Using an example of channel fracturing treatments, we show how the productivity index, effective fracture conductivity, and skin factor are sensitive to variations in pumping schedule design and pulsing strategy. We perform fracturing simulations using an advanced high-resolution multiphysics model that includes coupled 2D hydrodynamics with geomechanics (pseudo-3D, or P3D, model), 2D transport of materials with tracking temperature exposure history, in-situ kinetics, and a hindered settling model, which includes the effect of fibers. For all simulated fracturing treatments, we accurately solve a problem of 3D planar fracture closure on heterogenous spatial distribution of solids, estimate 2D profiles of fracture width and stresses applied to proppants, and, as a result, obtain the complex and heterogenous shape of fracture conductivity with highly conductive cells owing to the presence of channels. Then, we also evaluate reservoir fluid inflows from a reservoir to fracture walls and further along a fracture to limited-size wellbore perforations. Solution of a productivity problem at the finest scale allows us to accurately evaluate key productivity characteristics: productivity index, dimensional and dimensionless effective conductivity, skin factor, and folds of increase, as well as the total production rate at any day and for any pressure drawdown in a well during well production life. We develop a workflow to understand how productivity of a fracture depends on variation of the pumping schedule and facilitate taking appropriate decisions about the best job design. The presented workflow gives insight into how new computationally efficient methods can enable fast, convenient, and accurate evaluation of the material placement design for maximum production with cost-saving channel fracturing technology.


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