scholarly journals Sandstone Reservoir Wettability Alteration Due to Water Softening: Impact of Silica Nanoparticles on Sand Production Mechanism

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 6328-6342 ◽  

Low salinity water in the oil reservoirs changes the wettability and increases the oil recovery factor. In sandstone reservoirs, the sand production occurs or intensifies with wettability alteration due to low salinity water injection. In any case, sand production should be stopped and there are many ways to prevent sand production. By modifying the composition of low salinity water, it can be adapted to be more compatible with the reservoir rock and formation water, which has the least formation damage. By eliminating magnesium and calcium ions, smart soft water (SSW) is created which is economically suitable for injection into the reservoirs. By stabilizing the nanoparticles in SSW, nanofluids can be prepared which with injection into the sandstones reservoir increase the oil recovery, change the wettability and increase the rock strength. In this present, SSW composition was determined by compatibility testing, and the SiO2 nanoparticle with 1000 ppm concentration was stabilized in SSW. Eight thin sections were oil wetted by using normal heptane solution and different molars of stearic acid and two thin sections were considered as base thin sections to compare the effect of wettability alteration on sand production. Thin sections were immersed in SSW and Nanofluid, the amount of contact angle and sand production were measured in both cases. The amount of sand produced and the contact angle in SSW was higher than the Nanofluid. The silica nanoparticles reduced the contact angle (more water wetting) and by sitting between the sand particles, more than 40%, it reduced sand production.

2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (09) ◽  
pp. 62-63
Author(s):  
Chris Carpenter

This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 201586, “Effect of Silica Nanoparticles on Oil Recovery During Alternating Injection With Low-Salinity Water and Surfactant Into Carbonate Reservoirs,” by Saheed Olawale Olayiwola, SPE, and Morteza Dejam, SPE, University of Wyoming, prepared for the 2020 SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition, originally scheduled to be held in Denver, Colorado, 5–7 October. The paper has not been peer reviewed. Although the potential of nanoparticles (NPs) to improve oil recovery is promising, their effect during alternating injection is still uncertain. The main objective of the authors’ study is to investigate the best recovery mechanisms during alternating injection of NPs, low-salinity water (LSW), and surfactant and transform the results into field-scale technology. The outcome of these experiments revealed that tertiary injection of NPs results in additional oil recovery beyond the limits of LSW. Introduction A series of coreflooding experiments was conducted using several cores with an effective permeability of approximately 1 md to the brine at a temperature and pressure of 70°C and 3,000 psi. The study performs four different alternating injections of NPs with LSW and surfactant to determine optimal oil recovery. The wettability of the rock and fluid and the interfacial tension (IFT) of oil and water are measured to understand the mechanisms of interactions between the fluids and the reservoir rock. Materials A 12×12×12-in. block taken from an outcrop of Indiana limestone reservoir was purchased for this study. Four core plugs with a diameter of 1.5 in., used for the coreflooding experiments, were selected from this block. A synthetic 100,000-ppm (10 wt%) brine was prepared in the laboratory by dissolving sodium chloride (NaCl) and calcium chloride with a ratio of 4:1 in deionized water. The crude oil used in this study was a volatile oil (properties are described in Table 2 of the complete paper) obtained from the Permian Basin in Texas. Injected Fluids. A 10,000-ppm (1 wt%) LSW was prepared by diluting the synthetic brine 10 times. The surfactant solutions were prepared from an anionic sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) surfactant. A 1,000-ppm (0.1 wt%) surfactant solution used throughout the experiments was selected on the basis of the estimated critical micelle concentration of 600 to 2,240 ppm for SDS and nanofluid/NaCl. The concentration of silica NPs used in this study was 500 ppm (0.05 wt%). The nanofluids were pre-pared either as a simple solution or as a mixture with other chemicals to make a concentration of 500-ppm silica NPs. Coreflooding System. The established coreflooding system used for this experimental study was custom-made to determine the oil recovery and the relative permeabilities at steady-state and unsteady-state flows. However, the focus of this study is to investigate the effect of silica NPs on oil recovery. The schematic diagram of the coreflooding system is shown in Fig. 1.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Madadizadeh ◽  
Alireza Sadeghein ◽  
Siavash Riahi

Abstract Today, enhance oil recovery (EOR) methods are attracting more attention to increase the petroleum production rate. Some EOR methods such as low salinity water flooding (LSW) can increase the amount of fine migration and sand production in sandstone reservoirs which causes a reduction in permeability and inflict damages on to the reservoir and the production equipment. One of the methods to control fine migration is using nanotechnology. Nanoparticles (NPs) can reduce fine migration by various mechanisms such as reducing the zeta potential of fine particles' surfaces. In this paper, three NPs including SiO2, MgO, and Al2O3 's effects on controlling fine migration and sand production were investigated in two scenarios of pre-flush and co-injection by using sandpack as a porous media sample. When NPs are injected into the porous media sample, the outflow turbidity and zeta potential of particles decreases. Experiments showed that SiO2 has the best effect on controlling fine migration in comparison with other NPs and it could reduce fine migration 69% in pre-flush and 75% in co-injection. Also, MgO and Al2O3 decreased fine migration 65% and 33% in the pre-flush scenario and 49%,13% in the co-injection scenario, respectively.


RSC Advances ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (69) ◽  
pp. 42570-42583
Author(s):  
Rohit Kumar Saw ◽  
Ajay Mandal

The combined effects of dilution and ion tuning of seawater for enhanced oil recovery from carbonate reservoirs. Dominating mechanisms are calcite dissolution and the interplay of potential determining ions that lead to wettability alteration of rock surface.


Nanomaterials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 1296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reidun C. Aadland ◽  
Salem Akarri ◽  
Ellinor B. Heggset ◽  
Kristin Syverud ◽  
Ole Torsæter

Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) and 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO)-oxidized cellulose nanofibrils (T-CNFs) were tested as enhanced oil recovery (EOR) agents through core floods and microfluidic experiments. Both particles were mixed with low salinity water (LSW). The core floods were grouped into three parts based on the research objectives. In Part 1, secondary core flood using CNCs was compared to regular water flooding at fixed conditions, by reusing the same core plug to maintain the same pore structure. CNCs produced 5.8% of original oil in place (OOIP) more oil than LSW. For Part 2, the effect of injection scheme, temperature, and rock wettability was investigated using CNCs. The same trend was observed for the secondary floods, with CNCs performing better than their parallel experiment using LSW. Furthermore, the particles seemed to perform better under mixed-wet conditions. Additional oil (2.9–15.7% of OOIP) was produced when CNCs were injected as a tertiary EOR agent, with more incremental oil produced at high temperature. In the final part, the effect of particle type was studied. T-CNFs produced significantly more oil compared to CNCs. However, the injection of T-CNF particles resulted in a steep increase in pressure, which never stabilized. Furthermore, a filter cake was observed at the core face after the experiment was completed. Microfluidic experiments showed that both T-CNF and CNC nanofluids led to a better sweep efficiency compared to low salinity water flooding. T-CNF particles showed the ability to enhance the oil recovery by breaking up events and reducing the trapping efficiency of the porous medium. A higher flow rate resulted in lower oil recovery factors and higher remaining oil connectivity. Contact angle and interfacial tension measurements were conducted to understand the oil recovery mechanisms. CNCs altered the interfacial tension the most, while T-CNFs had the largest effect on the contact angle. However, the changes were not significant enough for them to be considered primary EOR mechanisms.


2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tammy Amirian ◽  
Manouchehr Haghighi

Low salinity water (LSW) injection as an enhanced oil recovery method has attracted much attention in the past two decades. Previously, it was found that the presence of clay such as kaolinite and water composition like the nature of cations affect the enhancement of oil recovery under LSW injection. In this study, a pore-scale visualisation approach was developed using a 2D glass micromodel to investigate the impact of clay type and water composition on LSW injection. The glass micromodels were coated by kaolinite and illite. A meniscus moving mechanism was observed and the oil–water interface moved through narrow throats to large bodies, displacing the wetting phase (oil phase). In the presence of kaolinite, the effect of LSW injection was reflected in the change to the wettability with a transition towards water-wetness in the large sections of the pore walls. The advance of the stable water front left behind an oil film on the oil-wet portions of pore walls; however, in water-wet surfaces, the interface moved towards the surface and replaced the oil film. As a result of wettability alteration towards a water-wet state, the capillary forces were not dominant throughout the system and the water–oil menisci displaced oil in large portions of very narrow channels. This LSW effect was not observed in the presence of illite. With regard to the water composition effect, systems containing divalent cations like Ca2+ showed the same extent of recovery as those containing only monovalent ions. The observation indicates a significant role of cation exchange in wettability alteration. Fines migration was insignificant in the observations.


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (15) ◽  
pp. 1345-1351 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erfan Sadatshojaei ◽  
Mohammad Jamialahmadi ◽  
Feridun Esmaeilzadeh ◽  
Mohammad Hossein Ghazanfari

2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (8) ◽  
pp. 40
Author(s):  
Hussain Ali Baker ◽  
Kareem A. Alwan ◽  
Saher Faris Fadhil

Smart water flooding (low salinity water flooding) was mainly invested in a sandstone reservoir. The main reasons for using low salinity water flooding are; to improve oil recovery and to give a support for the reservoir pressure. In this study, two core plugs of sandstone were used with different permeability from south of Iraq to explain the effect of water injection with different ions concentration on the oil recovery. Water types that have been used are formation water, seawater, modified low salinity water, and deionized water. The effects of water salinity, the flow rate of water injected, and the permeability of core plugs have been studied in order to summarize the best conditions of low salinity water flooding. The result of this experimental work shows that the water without any free ions (deionized water) and modified low salinity water have improved better oil recovery than the formation water and seawater as a secondary oil process. The increase in oil recovery factor related to the wettability alteration during low salinity water flooding which causes a decrease in the interfacial tension between the crude oil in porous media and the surface of reservoir rocks. As well as the dissolution of minerals such as calcite Ca+2 was observed in this work, which causes an increase in the pH value. All these factors led to change the wettability of rock to be more water-wet, so the oil recovery can be increased.  


SPE Journal ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (02) ◽  
pp. 417-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeid Khorsandi ◽  
Changhe Qiao ◽  
Russell T. Johns

Summary Polymer flooding can significantly improve sweep and delay breakthrough of injected water, thereby increasing oil recovery. Polymer viscosity degrades in reservoirs with high-salinity brines, so it is advantageous to inject low-salinity water as a preflush. Low-salinity waterflooding (LSW) can also improve local-displacement efficiency by changing the wettability of the reservoir rock from oil-wet to more water-wet. The mechanism for wettability alteration for LSW in sandstones is not very well-understood; however, experiments and field studies strongly support that cation-exchange (CE) reactions are the key elements in wettability alteration. The complex coupled effects of CE reactions, polymer properties, and multiphase flow and transport have not been explained to date. This paper presents the first analytical solutions for the coupled synergistic behavior of LSW and polymer flooding considering CE reactions, wettability alteration, adsorption, inaccessible pore volume (IPV), and salinity effects on polymer viscosity. A mechanistic approach that includes the CE of Ca2+, Mg2+, and Na+ is used to model the wettability alteration. The aqueous phase viscosity is a function of polymer and salt concentrations. Then, the coupled multiphase-flow and reactive-transport model is decoupled into three simpler subproblems—the first in which CE reactions are solved, the second in which a variable polymer concentration can be added to the reaction path, and the third in which fractional flows can be mapped onto the fixed cation and polymer-concentration paths. The solutions are used to develop a front-tracking algorithm, which can solve the slug-injection problem of low-salinity water as a preflush followed by polymer. The results are verified with experimental data and PennSim (2013), a general-purpose compositional simulator. The analytical solutions show that decoupling allows for estimation of key modeling parameters from experimental data, without considering the chemical reactions. Recovery can be significantly enhanced by a low-salinity preflush before polymer injection. For the cases studied, the improved oil recovery (IOR) for a chemically tuned low-salinity polymer (LSP) flood can be as much as 10% original oil in place (OOIP) greater than with considering polymer alone. The results show the structure of the solutions, and, in particular, the velocity of multiple shocks that develop. These shocks can interact, changing recovery. For example, poor recoveries obtained in corefloods for small-slug sizes of low salinity are explained by the intersection of shocks without considering mixing. The solutions can also be used to benchmark numerical solutions and for experimental design. We demonstrate the potential of LSP flooding as a less-expensive and more-effective way for performing polymer flooding when the reservoir wettability can be altered with chemically tuned low-salinity brine.


Author(s):  
Seyyed Hayan Zaheri ◽  
Hossein Khalili ◽  
Mohammad Sharifi

Water injection has been known as a conventional approach employed for years in order to achieve higher oil recovery from oil reservoirs. Since the last decade many researchers conducted on the water injection assessment suggested that low salinity water flooding can be an effective flooding mechanism and it can be used as an enhanced oil recovery method. Several examinations were conducted to identify governing mechanisms entailed in oil extraction and the effect of salinity and different types of ionic contents contained in Formation Water (FW) and injected fluid. This study is dedicated to address the influence of salinity and different types of ionic contents contained in formation water and injected fluid on incremental oil recovery. For this purpose, fluid–fluid and rock–fluid interaction were investigated especially for evaluating the effect of calcium ions in the formation water and sulfate ions in the injected water. Several experiments were carried out including core-flooding, contact angle, and imbibition tests. While former researchers concluded that reducing the salinity of injected water causing a decrease in ionic strength may lead to a greater oil recovery, in this research, we showed that these statements are not necessarily true. It was observed that existence of the high calcium concentration in the formation water would cause significant effect on wettability status of rocks and final oil recovery during low salinity water injection. This process is mainly due to rock wettability alteration. Wettability alteration mechanism in carbonate rocks is explained through interaction between rock and fluid composition. The results indicate the decisive role of calcium ions in the formation water at all stages from aging in oil to primary and secondary recovery. In addition to that, it was observed that more sulfate ion concentration in the injected water enhances rock wettability alteration.


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