COMPARISON OF RESIDUAL OIL SATURATION FOR WATER AND SUPERCRITICAL CO2 FLOODING IN A LONG CORE, WITH LIVE OIL AT RESERVOIR CONDITIONS

2011 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. 699-708 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Z. Moreno ◽  
R. G. Santos ◽  
C. Okabe ◽  
D. J. Schiozer ◽  
O. V. Trevisan ◽  
...  
2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosangela Zanoni Moreno ◽  
Euclides Bonet ◽  
Sergio Iatchuk ◽  
Raphael Augusto Mello Vieira ◽  
Antonio Claudio Franca Correa

2009 ◽  
Vol 12 (03) ◽  
pp. 419-426 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ingebret Fjelde ◽  
John Zuta ◽  
Ingrid Hauge

Summary Injection of carbon dioxide (CO2) is a well-known enhanced-oil-recovery (EOR) technique. Formation of stable foam inside the reservoir can improve macroscopic sweep efficiency. On the other hand, retention of surfactants decreases the cost-efficiency of the EOR process. This paper presents flow-through retention experiments with CO2-foaming agents on outcrop Liege chalk plugs at two different temperatures: 55 and 70°C. Two branched ethoxylated (EO) sulfonates with different ethoxylation degree, S1 (EO=7) and S2 (EO=12), were used. The aim was to investigate the effect of ethoxylation degree on surfactant retention. Furthermore, the effects of temperature and residual oil on surfactant retention were studied. The effect of waterflooding followed by CO2 flooding on surfactant retention at reservoir conditions was also examined. Partitioning of the foaming agents between water and oil phases was studied. Results show that increasing the ethoxylation degree of the surfactant decreases the retention on chalk cores saturated with formation water at 55°C. S2, which was found to give the lowest retention at 55°C, was found to have a higher retention at 70°C. The presence of residual-oil saturation after waterflooding (Sorw) decreased the retention of S1 and increased the retention of S2 in comparison to the absence of residual oil. The retention of S2 after waterflooding followed by CO2 flooding at 340 bar and 55°C was in the same range as retention on 100%-water-saturated core, but significantly lower than retention in residual-oil-saturated cores. The experiments have shown that not only are surfactant structure and temperature important for the retention of surfactants, but also the presence of oil.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prakash Purswani ◽  
Russell T. Johns ◽  
Zuleima T. Karpyn

Abstract The relationship between residual saturation and wettability is critical for modeling enhanced oil recovery (EOR) processes. The wetting state of a core is often quantified through Amott indices, which are estimated from the ratio of the saturation fraction that flows spontaneously to the total saturation change that occurs due to spontaneous flow and forced injection. Coreflooding experiments have shown that residual oil saturation trends against wettability indices typically show a minimum around mixed-wet conditions. Amott indices, however, provides an average measure of wettability (contact angle), which are intrinsically dependent on a variety of factors such as the initial oil saturation, aging conditions, etc. Thus, the use of Amott indices could potentially cloud the observed trends of residual saturation with wettability. Using pore network modeling (PNM), we show that residual oil saturation varies monotonically with the contact angle, which is a direct measure of wettability. That is, for fixed initial oil saturation, the residual oil saturation decreases monotonically as the reservoir becomes more water-wet (decreasing contact angle). Further, calculation of Amott indices for the PNM data sets show that a plot of the residual oil saturation versus Amott indices also shows this monotonic trend, but only if the initial oil saturation is kept fixed. Thus, for the cases presented here, we show that there is no minimum residual saturation at mixed-wet conditions as wettability changes. This can have important implications for low salinity waterflooding or other EOR processes where wettability is altered.


2011 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Taufiq Fathaddin ◽  
Asri Nugrahanti ◽  
Putri Nurizatulshira Buang ◽  
Khaled Abdalla Elraies

In this paper, simulation study was conducted to investigate the effect of spatial heterogeneity of multiple porosity fields on oil recovery, residual oil and microemulsion saturation. The generated porosity fields were applied into UTCHEM for simulating surfactant-polymer flooding in heterogeneous two-layered porous media. From the analysis, surfactant-polymer flooding was more sensitive than water flooding to the spatial distribution of multiple porosity fields. Residual oil saturation in upper and lower layers after water and polymer flooding was about the same with the reservoir heterogeneity. On the other hand, residual oil saturation in the two layers after surfactant-polymer flooding became more unequal as surfactant concentration increased. Surfactant-polymer flooding had higher oil recovery than water and polymer flooding within the range studied. The variation of oil recovery due to the reservoir heterogeneity was under 9.2%.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.T. Edwards ◽  
M.M. Honarpour ◽  
R.D. Hazlett ◽  
M. Cohen ◽  
A. Membere ◽  
...  

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