A New Technology Combined Corrosion inhibition and water shutoff in Oil Well

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qing You ◽  
Fei Ye Wang ◽  
Lin Fu Zhao
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Yadav ◽  
Sumit Kumar ◽  
P. N. Yadav

Acidization is an oil reservoir stimulation technique for increasing oil well productivity. Hydrochloric acid is used in oil and gas production to stimulate the formation. The acid treatment occurs through N80 steel tubes. The process requires a high degree of corrosion inhibition of tubing material (N80 steel). In the present investigation effect of synthesized amino acid compounds, namely, acetamidoleucine (AAL) and benzamidoleucine (BAL) as corrosion inhibitors for N80 steel in 15% HCl solution was studied by polarization, AC impedance (EIS), and weight loss measurements. It was found that both the inhibitors were effective inhibitors and their inhibition efficiency was significantly increased with increasing concentration of inhibitors. Polarization curves revealed that the studied inhibitors represent mixed type inhibitors. AC impedance studies revealed that charge transfer resistance increases and double layer capacitance decreases in presence of inhibitors. Adsorption of inhibitors at the surface of N80 steel was found to obey Langmuir isotherm.


2012 ◽  
Vol 199 (11) ◽  
pp. 1335-1356 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Migahed ◽  
Ahmed A. Farag ◽  
S. M. Elsaed ◽  
R. Kamal ◽  
H. Abd El-Bary

2016 ◽  
Vol 841 ◽  
pp. 148-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alagu Karthik Valliappan ◽  
Raja Rajeswary Suppiah ◽  
Sonny Irawan ◽  
Ridho Bayuaji

For many years, Ordinary Portland Cement (OPC) is used in oil well cementing operation. But the OPC gets degraded in the acidic environment because of having poor mechanical characteristics. A new technology called geopolymeric cement system is developed from the secondary byproducts of the industry to replace the conventional cement slurry in oil well cementing operation. This study focus on the preparation of cement slurry with new formulation using fly ash and alkali binders at two sodium hydroxide treatment methods with various concentrations of NaOH solution and analyzing the prepared cement slurry for compressive strength, defiance to acid and fluid loss amount. Different cement slurry compositions made of 70:30 fly ash to alkaline activator ratios with 10, 12, 14 Molar NaOH solution with two sodium hydroxide treatment methods of direct addition and mixing after one day soaking of NaOH were prepared and cured for 24 hours at a temperature of 80°C and pressure 3000 psi. The obtained cement specimens were tested for compressive strength, resistance towards acid and density. Then based on the results, geopolymer can be considered as alternative for Class G cement in oil well cementing operation due to its high compressive strength and high acid resistance.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Yadav ◽  
Sumit Kumar ◽  
P. N. Yadav

In the present investigation the protective ability of 1-(2-aminoethyl)-2-octadecylimidazoline (AEODI) and 1-(2-octadecylamidoethyl)-2-octadecylimidazoline (ODAEODI) as corrosion inhibitors for N80 steel in 15% hydrochloric acid has been studied, which may find application as ecofriendly corrosion inhibitors in acidizing processes in petroleum industry. Different concentration of synthesized inhibitors AEODI and ODAEODI was added to test solution (15% HCl), and corrosion inhibition of N80 steel was tested by weight loss, potentiodynamic polarization, and AC impedance measurements. Influence of temperature (298 to 323 K) on the inhibition behaviour was studied. Surface studies were performed by using SEM. It was found that both the inhibitors were effective inhibitors, and their inhibition efficiency was significantly increased with increasing their concentration. Polarization curves revealed that the used inhibitors represent mixed-type inhibitors. The adsorption of used inhibitors led to a reduction in the double-layer capacitance and an increase in the charge transfer resistance. The adsorption of used compounds was found to obey Langmuir isotherm. The adsorption of the corrosion inhibitors at the surface of N80 steel is the root cause of corrosion inhibition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (09) ◽  
pp. 57-57
Author(s):  
Jonathan Wylde

As production chemists, we are all aware of the overall concepts of improved oil recovery (IOR) and enhanced oil recovery (EOR). Perhaps, though, fewer of us are aware of the different idiosyncrasies that exist within (and even between) these two broad categories of recovery and then how chemistry and chemicals can have an effect upon these processes. I would like to propose that the lines once were quite distinct between IOR and EOR: IOR was a standard waterflood operation, and EOR (from a chemist’s perspective) was the addition of chemistry to that waterflood (typically polymer or surfactant). Nowadays, the science has evolved massively to create many sub-genres of IOR and EOR. A waterflood is rarely just a waterflood anymore. We can alternate water and gas injection. We can add chemical conformance aids to direct better the flow of water. We can change the salinity of the water to promote better wettability for higher recovery factors. The list goes on. One just has to search out the number of EOR papers vs. (pretty much) every other discipline of production chemistry to see the commitment this industry still has to the research of this discipline. In recent years, the focus has tended to move away from deep-reservoir EOR to focus on near-wellbore stimulation. Interestingly, the mechanistic considerations that we make as production chemists are nearly identical in all cases, and significant synergies exist between these subdisciplines. Therefore, from the recent research published by SPE, two focused topics of IOR/EOR have arisen: the use of nanoparticles and the use of water-shutoff technologies. Nanoparticle use is gaining significant traction in the oil and gas industry, and field applications are now being reported. The area of IOR/EOR is no exception. Water shutoff is not a new technology area. However, are these established, production-sustaining IOR techniques seeing a resurgence caused by the headwinds our industry has faced during the COVID-19 pandemic? Recommended additional reading at OnePetro: www.onepetro.org. OTC 30123 - Thermal and Rheological Investigations on N,N’-Methylenebis Acrylamide Cross-Linked Polyacrylamide Nanocomposite Hydrogels for Water-Shutoff Applications by Mohan Raj Keishnan, Alfiasal University, et al. IPTC 20210 - Chemical and Mechanical Water Shutoff in Horizontal Passive ICD Wells: Experience and Lessons Learned in Giant Darcy Reservoir by Mohamed Abdel-Basset, Schlumberger, et al. SPE 203831 - Efficient Preparation of Nanostarch Particles and Mechanism of Enhanced Oil Recovery in Low-Permeability Oil Reservoirs by Lei Zhang, China University of Geosciences, et al.


10.29007/flck ◽  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hussain Albarakati ◽  
Reda Ammar ◽  
Raafat Elfouly

Underwater acoustic sensor networks have been developed as a new technology for real-time underwater applications, including seismic monitoring, disaster prevention, and oil well inspection. Unfortunately, this new technology is constrained to data sensing, large-volume transmission, and forwarding. As a result, the transmission of large volumes of data is costly in terms of both time and power. We thus focused our research activities on the development of embedded underwater computing systems. In this advanced technology, information extraction is performed underwater using data mining techniques or compression algorithms. We previously presented a new set of real-time underwater embedded system architectures that can manage multiple network configurations. In this study, we extend our research to develop information extraction for seismic monitoring underwater application to meet real-time constraints. The system performance is measured in terms of the minimum end-to-end delay and power consumption. The simulation results are presented to measure the performance of our architecture based on the information extraction algorithm.


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