scholarly journals Development of Greener D-Metal Inorganic Crosslinkers for Polymeric Gels Used in Water Control in Oil and Gas Applications

Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (16) ◽  
pp. 4262
Author(s):  
Hassan I. Nimir ◽  
Ahmed Hamza ◽  
Ibnelwaleed A. Hussein

Crosslinkable polymers, such as polyacrylamide (PAM), are widely applied for water control in oil and gas reservoirs. Organic and inorganic crosslinkers are used to formulate a gel with PAM. Although chromium has a high level of toxicity, it has been implemented as an effective crosslinker combined with carboxylates because of the controllability of crosslinking time at low temperatures. The objective of this work was to develop greener d-metal inorganic crosslinkers based on cobalt, copper, and nickel to replace chromium for application at reservoir conditions. The obtained results showed that the gelation chemistry of the developed systems depends on the metal charge density. The gelation of PAM with d-metals depends on pH and temperature for low- and high-charge density, respectively. Cobalt (II) acetate (CoAc) was effective at high temperatures (130–150 °C) and forms (4% CoAc + 9%PAM) stable, and strong gels at a pH > 7 with a storage modulus exceeding 4300 Pa. However, Nickel Acetate and Cupper Acetate formed stable weak gels at low temperatures (50–70 °C) and a pH > 6 and gel decomposition was observed upon increasing the temperature. The developed formulations were compatible with low-salinity water (1000 ppm NaCl).

SPE Journal ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
Yaoze Cheng ◽  
Yin Zhang ◽  
Abhijit Dandekar ◽  
Jiawei Li

Summary Shallow reservoirs on the Alaska North Slope (ANS), such as Ugnu and West Sak-Schrader Bluff, hold approximately 12 to 17 × 109 barrels of viscous oil. Because of the proximity of these reservoirs to the permafrost, feasible nonthermal enhanced oil recovery (EOR) methods are highly needed to exploit these oil resources. This study proposes three hybrid nonthermal EOR techniques, including high-salinity water (HSW) injection sequentially followed by low-salinity water (LSW) and low-salinity polymer (LSP) flooding (HSW-LSW-LSP), solvent-alternating-LSW flooding, and solvent-alternating-LSP flooding, to recover ANS viscous oils. The oil recovery performance of these hybrid EOR techniques has been evaluated by conducting coreflooding experiments. Additionally, constant composition expansion (CCE) tests, ζ potential determinations, and interfacial tension (IFT) measurements have been conducted to reveal the EOR mechanisms of the three proposed hybrid EOR techniques. Coreflooding experiments and IFT measurements have been conducted at reservoir conditions of 1,500 psi and 85°F, while CCE tests have been carried out at a reservoir temperature of 85°F. ζ potential determinations have been conducted at 14.7 psi and 77°F. The coreflooding experiment results have demonstrated that all of the three proposed hybrid EOR techniques could result in much better performance in reducing residual oil saturation than waterflooding and continuous solvent flooding in viscous oil reservoirs on ANS, implying better oil recovery potential. In particular, severe formation damage or blockage at the production end occurred when natural sand was used to prepare the sandpack column, indicating that the natural sand may have introduced some unknown constituents that may react with the injected solvent and polymer, resulting in a severe blocking issue. Our investigation on this is ongoing, and more detailed studies are being conducted in our laboratory. The CCE test results demonstrate that more solvent could be dissolved into the tested viscous oil with increasing pressure, simultaneously resulting in more oil swelling and viscosity reduction. At the desired reservoir conditions of 1,500 psi and 85°F, as much as 60 mol% of solvent could be dissolved into the ANS viscous oil, resulting in more than 31% oil swelling and 97% oil viscosity reduction. Thus, the obvious oil swelling and significant viscosity reduction resulting from solvent injection could lead to much better microscopic displacement efficiency during the solvent flooding. The ζ potential determination results illustrate that LSW resulted in more negative ζ potential than HSW on the interface between sand and water, indicating that lowering the salinity of injected brine could result in the sand surface being more water-wet, but adding polymer to the LSW could not further enhance the water wetness. The IFT measurement results show that the IFT between the tested ANS viscous oil and LSW is higher than that between the tested viscous oil and HSW, which conflicts with the commonly recognized IFT reduction effect by LSW flooding. Thus, the EOR theory of the LSW flooding in our proposed hybrid techniques may be attributed to low-salinity effects (LSEs) such as multi-ion exchange, expansion of electrical double layer, and salting-in effect, while water wetness enhancement may benefit the LSW flooding process to some extent. The LSP’s viscosity is much higher than the viscosities of LSW and solvent, so LSP injection could result in better mobility control in the tested viscous oil reservoirs, leading to improvement of macroscopic sweep efficiency. Combining these EOR theories, the proposed hybrid EOR techniques have the potential to significantly increase oil recovery in viscous oil reservoirs on ANS by maximizing the overall displacement efficiency.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2132 (1) ◽  
pp. 012049
Author(s):  
Yan-qing Bian ◽  
Pu-cheng Wu ◽  
Jing Hao ◽  
Quan Shi ◽  
Guo-wei Qin

Abstract Based on the previous research on the rheological properties of nanofluids by many scholars at home and abroad, to solve the problem that the viscosity of conventional polymer water control agents is large and cannot meet the demand for increasing production capacity in the process of tight gas reservoir exploitation, this paper takes self-made nanofluids as the research object, tests the rheological properties of self-made nanofluids by rheological experiment, and systematically studies the effects of concentration, temperature and shear action on the viscosity of nanofluids, and the dynamic viscoelasticity and thixotropy of nanofluids were discussed. The results show that the rheological type of nanofluid belongs to power-law fluid, but it is related to the shear rate. The viscosity of nanofluids increases with the increase of concentration; when the temperature increases, the viscosity of nanofluids decreases and the fluidity increases; under the shear action, the viscosity of nanofluid changes very little and has good shear resistance; the dynamic viscoelastic test shows that the storage modulus G´ of the nanofluid is larger than the loss modulus G”, showing elastic characteristics; the thixotropy test shows that when the shear rate is accelerated, the viscosity decreases with time, and when the shear rate is slowed down, the viscosity recovers rapidly with time, which has good thixotropy. The research results provide an important theoretical basis for further research on the application of nanomaterials in tight oil and gas reservoirs.


2015 ◽  
Vol 773-774 ◽  
pp. 1335-1339
Author(s):  
Kafayat Oluwatoyin Shobowale ◽  
Fakhruldin Mohd Hashim ◽  
Hilmi bin Hussien

Subsea processing equipment’s are deployed in Deepwater / subsea marginal field, fields having challenging reservoir characteristics (which includes: high viscosity, high GVF) in order to economically recover oil and gas. They includes: multiphase booster pump, subsea separation and compression equipment’s. These equipment’s faces a high level of uncertainty as regards well and reservoir conditions, putting the equipment in an unfavorable condition covering a wide and variable range of processes including transient Flow, variable oil flow, fluid pressures, temperature and gas compression effects. More so, knowledge engineers in different areas are assessing this domain in different ways making the performance parameters and relations to be defined differently when utilizing computer based tools for assessment and selection. A four step process is proposed which are: domain knowledge acquisition, failure data analysis, knowledge model and a knowledge base system will reveal the key components and parameters that are needed to make an optimum decision. The applicability of these four step process is demonstrated in the assessment and selection of subsea multiphase booster pumps.


2018 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-84
Author(s):  
Maaz Akhtar ◽  
Sayyad Zahid Qamar ◽  
Syed Murtuza Mehdi ◽  
Ahmad Hussain

Swelling elastomers are designed to swell when immersed into fluids like water, oil, or acid. The mechanism of swelling can be either diffusion or osmosis, initiating the imbibition of fluid inside the elastomer and progressively swelling it. Work presented here investigates diffusion as the swelling mechanism. Swelling experiments are conducted at two temperatures (room and 50°C) using water of different salinities (0.6% and 12%) as the swelling medium. Changes in volume, thickness, mass, and hardness are recorded. Measurements are taken before swelling and after 1, 2, 4, 7, 10, 16, 23, and 30 days of swelling. As expected, volume, thickness, and mass of the elastomer increase with increase in the number of swelling days, while hardness shows a decreasing trend. More variation is observed for all quantities in low-salinity brine as compared to high salinity, at both temperatures. However, density values are larger for high-salinity brine at both temperatures. Stokes–Einstein formula is used to determine the diffusion coefficients. Viscosity is measured using a Cannon–Fenske apparatus of size 50. Larger values of diffusion coefficient are found in low-salinity water at both temperatures, consistent with the higher amount of swelling and the faster swelling rate. These results and the diffusion-based approach will help in understanding the mechanics of swelling phenomenon. This work can aid in the development of new analytical and semi-analytical models that can predict seal pressure and other performance factors more accurately for applications in oil and gas wells.


Author(s):  
Abdulrazag Zekri ◽  
Hildah Nantongo ◽  
Fathi Boukadi

AbstractWhile the “low salinity waterflooding” (LSWF) has been praised for enhancing oil recovery from different core rocks, the performance of the technique in different wettability environments remains unclear. The consensus is that LSWF does not work well in water-wet carbonate oil reservoirs. The main research objective was to determine the effect of LSWF on the displacement efficiency (DE) in different wettability environments. Carbonate core flooding experiments on rocks with different wettabilities were performed at in-situ reservoir conditions using seawater as a “base water”. Seawater was sequentially diluted 10 to 50 times and spiked 2 and 6 times with sulfate. Following sequential flooding with four different waters, the DEs were measured for different wettabilities. Five different sequential brine floodings were performed on carbonate rocks. Results indicated that optimum low salinity water is a function of system wettability. Seawater (≈ 50,000 ppm) is the optimum brine for oil-wet and intermediate-wettability systems. Sequential flooding consisting of seawater followed by diluted seawater in a water-wet system yielded the highest DE of 88%. Besides, low-salinity brine followed by sulfate performed better in a water-wet environment than in oil- and intermediate-wettability systems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Alhammadi ◽  
Shehadeh Masalmeh Masalmeh ◽  
Budoor Al-Shehhi ◽  
Mehran Sohrabi ◽  
Amir Farzaneh

Abstract This study aims to compare the roles of rock and crude oil in improving recovery by low salinity water injection (LSWI) and, particularly, to explore the significance of micro-dispersion formation in LSWI performance. Core samples and crude oil were taken from two carbonate reservoirs (A and B) in Abu Dhabi. The oil samples were selected such that one of them would form micro-dispersion when in contact with low salinity brine while the other would not. A series of coreflood experiments was performed in secondary and tertiary modes under reservoir conditions. First, a core sample from reservoir A was initialized and aged with crude oil from reservoir A and a core sample from reservoir B was initialized and aged with crude oil from reservoir B. The cores were then swapped, and the performance of low salinity injection was tested using rock from reservoir A and crude from reservoir B, and vice versa. For the first set of experiments, we found that the crude oil sample capable of forming micro-dispersion (we call this oil "positive", from reservoir A) resulted in extra oil recovery in both secondary and tertiary LSWI modes, compared to high salinity flooding. Moreover, in the secondary LSWI mode we observed significant acceleration of oil production, with higher ultimate oil recovery (12.5%) compared to tertiary mode (6.5%). To ensure repeatability, the tertiary experiment was repeated, and the results were reproduced. The core flood test performed using "negative" crude oil that did not form micro-dispersion (from reservoir B) showed no improvement in oil recovery compared to high salinity waterflooding. In the "cross-over" experiments (when cores were swapped), the positive crude oil showed a similar improvement in oil recovery and the negative crude oil showed no improvement in oil recovery even though each of them was used with a core sample from the other reservoir. These results suggest that it is the properties of crude oil rather than the rock that play the greater role in oil recovery. These results suggest that the ability of crude oil to form micro-dispersion when contacted with low salinity water is an important factor in determining whether low salinity injection will lead to extra oil recovery during both secondary and tertiary LSWI. The pH and ionic composition of the core effluent were measured for all experiments and were unaffected by the combination of core and oil used in each experiment. This work provides new experimental evidence regarding real reservoir rock and oil under reservoir conditions. The novel crossover approach in which crude oil from one reservoir was tested in another reservoir rock was helpful for understanding the relative roles of crude oil and rock in the low salinity water mechanism. Our approach suggests a simple, rapid and low-cost methodology for screening target reservoirs for LSWI.


Author(s):  
A. Shynkarenko

Permeability of rock is its physical property that describes its ability to conduct fluids under the pressure gradient. This paper presents short description and analysis of methods for determination of permeability of oil and gas reservoirs. Permeability is a function of different parameters that leads to difficulties during its estimation. Investigations of the void space structure of rocks, their anisotropy etc.were carried out in order to take into account all factors that have an influence on the permeability. Reservoir conditions could also be modeled for that purpose. Methods for determination of permeability of rocks can be divided into three groups: methods based on the laboratory studies of rocks; methods based on the well logging data; and methods based on the correlations between different parameters of rocks. The first two groups include methods for steady and unsteady fluid flow. Methods for the unsteady flow are usually more precise and rapid, thus prospects of extension of methods for permeability determination are mostly connected with them. Each of the presented methods to determine permeability is characterized by some pros and cons. The most appropriate method for the specific experiment is always chosen according to conditions and requirements and expected results. Further author's investigations will be related to the creation of petrophysical models of permeability of oil and gas reservoir rocks, including reservoirs of complex structure.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document