Low-Salinity Chase Waterfloods Improve Performance of Cr(III)-Acetate Hydrolyzed Polyacrylamide Gel in Fractured Cores

2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (02) ◽  
pp. 331-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bergit Brattekås ◽  
Arne Graue ◽  
Randall S. Seright

Summary Polymer gels are frequently applied for conformance improvement in fractured reservoirs, where fluid channeling through fractures limits the success of waterflooding. Placement of polymer gel in fractures reduces fracture conductivity, thus increasing pressure gradients across matrix blocks during chase floods. A gel-filled fracture is reopened to fluid flow if the injection pressure during chase floods exceeds the gel-rupture pressure; thus, channeling through the fractures resumes. The success of a polymer-gel treatment, therefore, depends on the rupture pressure. Salinity differences between the gel network and surrounding water phase are known causes of gel swelling (e.g., observed in recent work on preformed particle gels). Gel swelling and its effect on fluid flow have, however, been less studied in conjunction with conventional polymer gels. By use of corefloods, this work demonstrates that low-salinity water can swell conventional Cr(III)-acetate hydrolyzed polyacrylamide (HPAM) gels, thereby significantly improving gel-blocking performance after gel rupture. Formed polymer gel was placed in fractured core plugs, and chase waterfloods were performed using four different brine compositions, of which three were low-salinity brines. The fluid flow rates through the matrix and differential pressures across the matrix and fracture were measured and shown to increase with decreasing salinity in the injected water phase. In some cores, the fractures were reblocked during low-salinity waterfloods, and gel-blocking capacity was increased above the initial level. Low-salinity water subsequently flooded the matrix during chase floods, which provided additional benefits to the waterflood. The improved blocking capacity of the gel was caused by a difference in salinity between the gel and injected water phase, which induced gel swelling. The results were reproducible through several experiments, and stable for long periods of time in both sandstone and carbonate outcrop core materials. Combining polymer gel placement in fractures with low-salinity chase floods is a promising approach in integrated enhanced oil recovery (IEOR).

2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (01) ◽  
pp. 118-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emad W. Al-Shalabi ◽  
Haishan Luo ◽  
Mojdeh Delshad ◽  
Kamy Sepehrnoori

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