Water-cut reduction during waterflood by induced fines migration: effects of varying formation damage coefficient

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abbas Zeinijahromi ◽  
Phillip Edward Lemon ◽  
Pavel G. Bedrikovetsky
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Yang ◽  
Z. You ◽  
F. D. Siqueira ◽  
A. Vaz ◽  
P. Bedrikovetsky

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phuong Thi Nguyen ◽  
Abbas Zeinijahromi ◽  
Pavel G. Bedrikovetsky

2002 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 15
Author(s):  
P. Bedrikovetsky ◽  
F. Rosario ◽  
M. Bezerra ◽  
M. Silva ◽  
R. Lopes Jr.

Several different scenario of injected and reservoir water mixing have been proposed: mixing at high velocity near to injectors, mixing at low velocity inside reservoirs, mixing by diffusion via boundaries of layers with different permeabilities, mixing of injected, connate and aquifer waters at high velocity near to producers. Just the latter mechanism results in the accumulation of formation damage, while other mechanisms cause precipitation near to moving concentration front. In the current paper a new mechanism of oilfield scaling by diffusion of Barium from impermeable layer into the reservoir is proposed. The mechanism results in accumulation of precipitant and of formation damage. Viscous dominant regime of waterflooding takes place in the majority of oil fields. The Welge´s method allows calculating the permeability distribution from water cut history. The proposed extension to Welge´s method determines the partition of permeable layers in a reservoir from tracer concentration in production wells. Knowledge of this partition is important for modelling of oilfield scaling accounting for Barium supply from impermeable layers.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Russell ◽  
Larissa Chequer ◽  
Alexander Badalyan ◽  
Aron Behr ◽  
Luis Genolet ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 700
Author(s):  
Larissa Chequer ◽  
Mohammad Bagheri ◽  
Abbas Zeinijahromi ◽  
Pavel Bedrikovetsky

Formation damage by fines migration during low-salinity water injection can greatly affect field-scale waterflooding projects. In this paper, we present the basic governing equations for single-phase flow with detachment, migration and straining of natural reservoir fines. We perform laboratory corefloods with low-salinity water injections and monitor the breakthrough particle concentration and pressure drop across the core. The analytical model for linear flow matches the laboratory data with high accuracy. The analytical model for radial flow predicts well behaviour from laboratory-tuned coefficients. The calculations show that fines migration during low-salinity water injection causes significant injectivity decline. For typical values of fines-migration model coefficients, injectivity index declines 2–8 times during 10−3 pore volumes injected and the radius of the damaged zone does not exceed a few metres. We present two field cases on waterflooding and low-salinity water injection. The radial model presents good agreement with well injectivity field data.


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