Effects of Injection Rate of Low Salinity Brine on Oil Recovery Mechanisms and Relative Permeability Curves

Author(s):  
F. Srisuriyachai ◽  
S. Panthuvichien ◽  
T. Phomsuwansiri ◽  
W. Katekaew
SPE Journal ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (01) ◽  
pp. 481-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pål Østebø Andersen

Summary Many experimental studies have investigated smart water and low-salinity waterflooding and observed significant incremental oil recovery after changes in the injected-brine composition. The common approach to model such enhanced-oil-recovery (EOR) mechanisms is by shifting the input relative permeability curves, particularly including a reduction of the residual oil saturation. Cores that originally display oil-wetness can retain much oil at the outlet of the flooded core because of the capillary pressure being zero at a high oil saturation. This end effect is difficult to overcome in highly permeable cores at typical laboratory rates. Injecting a brine that changes the wetting state to less-oil-wet conditions (represented by zero capillary pressure at a lower oil saturation) will lead to a release of oil previously trapped at the outlet. Although this is chemically induced incremental oil, it represents a reduction of remaining oil saturation, not necessarily of residual oil saturation. This paper illustrates the mentioned issues of interpreting the difference in remaining and residual oil saturation during chemical EOR and hence the evaluation of potential smart water effects. We present a mathematical model representing coreflooding that accounts for wettability changes caused by changes in the injected composition. For purpose of illustration, this is performed in terms of adsorption of a wettability-alteration (WA) component coupled to the shifting of relative permeability curves and capillary pressure curves. The model is parameterized in accordance with experimental data by matching brine-dependent saturation functions to experiments where wettability alteration takes place dynamically because of the changing of one chemical component. It is seen that several effects can give an apparent smart water effect without having any real reduction of the residual oil saturation, including changes in the mobility ratio, where the oil already flowing is pushed more efficiently, and the magnitude of capillary end effects can be reduced because of increased water-wetness or because of a reduction in water relative permeability giving a greater viscous drag on the oil.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 1979
Author(s):  
Omar Chaabi ◽  
Mohammed Al Kobaisi ◽  
Mohamed Haroun

Low salinity waterflooding (LSW) has shown promising results in terms of increasing oil recovery at laboratory scale. In this work, we study the LSW effect, at laboratory scale, and provide a basis for quantifying the effect at field scale by extracting reliable relative permeability curves. These were achieved by experimental and numerical interpretation of laboratory core studies. Carbonate rock samples were used to conduct secondary and tertiary unsteady-state coreflooding experiments at reservoir conditions. A mathematical model was developed as a research tool to interpret and further validate the physical plausibility of the coreflooding experiments. At core scale and a typical field rate of ~1 ft/day, low salinity water (LS) resulted in not only ~20% higher oil recovery compared to formation water (FW) but also recovered oil sooner. LS water also showed capability of reducing the residual oil saturation when flooded in tertiary mode. The greater oil recovery caused by LSW can be attributed to altering the wettability of the rock to less oil-wet as confirmed by the numerically extracted relative permeability curves.


Polytechnica ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 30-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Dias da Silva ◽  
Ernane de Freitas Martins ◽  
Michele Aparecida Salvador ◽  
Alvaro David Torrez Baptista ◽  
James Moraes de Almeida ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 1010-1012 ◽  
pp. 1676-1683 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Li ◽  
Wan Fen Pu ◽  
Ke Xing Li ◽  
Hu Jia ◽  
Ke Yu Wang ◽  
...  

To improve the understanding of the influence of effective permeability, reservoir temperature and oil-water viscosity on relative permeability and oil recovery factor, core displacement experiments had been performed under several experimental conditions. Core samples used in every test were natural cores that came from Halfaya oilfield while formation fluids were simulated oil and water prepared based on analyze data of actual oil and productive water. Results from the experiments indicated that the shape of relative permeability curves, irreducible water saturation, residual oil saturation, width of two-phase region and position of isotonic point were all affected by these factors. Besides, oil recovery and water cut were also related closely to permeability, temperature and viscosity ratio.


1961 ◽  
Vol 1 (02) ◽  
pp. 61-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Naar ◽  
J.H. Henderson

Introduction The displacement of a wetting fluid from a porous medium by a non-wetting fluid (drainage) is now reasonably well understood. A complete explanation has yet to be found for the analogous case of a wetting fluid being spontaneously imbibed and the non-wetting phase displaced (imbibition). During the displacement of oil or gas by water in a water-wet sand, the porous medium ordinarily imbibes water. The amount of oil recovered, the cost of recovery and the production history seem then to be controlled mainly by pore geometry. The influence of pore geometry is reflected in drainage and imbibition capillary-pressure curves and relative permeability curves. Relative permeability curves for a particular consolidated sand show that at any given saturation the permeability to oil during imbibition is smaller than during drainage. Low imbibition permeabilities suggest that the non-wetting phase, oil or gas, is gradually trapped by the advancing water. This paper describes a mathematical image (model) of consolidated porous rock based on the concept of the trapping of the non-wetting phase during the imbibition process. The following items have been derived from the model.A direct relation between the relative permeability characteristics during imbibition and those observed during drainage.A theoretical limit for the fractional amount of oil or gas recoverable by imbibition.An expression for the resistivity index which can be used in connection with the formula for wetting-phase relative permeability to check the consistency of the model.The limits of flow performance for a given rock dictated by complete wetting by either oil or water.The factors controlling oil recovery by imbibition in the presence of free gas. The complexity of a porous medium is such that drastic simplifications must be introduced to obtain a model amenable to mathematical treatment. Many parameters have been introduced by others in "progressing" from the parallel-capillary model to the randomly interconnected capillary models independently proposed by Wyllie and Gardner and Marshall. To these a further complication must be added since an imbibition model must trap part of the non-wetting phase during imbibition of the wetting phase. Like so many of the previously introduced complications, this fluid-block was introduced to make the model performance fit the observed imbibition flow behavior.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emad Waleed Al-Shalabi ◽  
Kamy Sepehrnoori ◽  
Gary Pope

Low salinity water injection (LSWI) is gaining popularity as an improved oil recovery technique in both secondary and tertiary injection modes. The objective of this paper is to investigate the main mechanisms behind the LSWI effect on oil recovery from carbonates through history-matching of a recently published coreflood. This paper includes a description of the seawater cycle match and two proposed methods to history-match the LSWI cycles using the UTCHEM simulator. The sensitivity of residual oil saturation, capillary pressure curve, and relative permeability parameters (endpoints and Corey’s exponents) on LSWI is evaluated in this work. Results showed that wettability alteration is still believed to be the main contributor to the LSWI effect on oil recovery in carbonates through successfully history matching both oil recovery and pressure drop data. Moreover, tuning residual oil saturation and relative permeability parameters including endpoints and exponents is essential for a good data match. Also, the incremental oil recovery obtained by LSWI is mainly controlled by oil relative permeability parameters rather than water relative permeability parameters. The findings of this paper help to gain more insight into this uncertain IOR technique and propose a mechanistic model for oil recovery predictions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdulla Aljaberi ◽  
Seyed Amir Farzaneh ◽  
Shokoufeh Aghabozorgi ◽  
Mohammad Saeid Ataei ◽  
Mehran Sohrabi

Abstract Oil recovery by low salinity waterflood is significantly affected by fluid-fluid interaction through the micro-dispersion effect. This interaction influences rock wettability and relative permeability functions. Therefore, to gain a better insight into multiphase flow in porous media and perform numerical simulations, reliable relative permeability data is crucial. Unsteady-state or steady-state displacement methods are commonly used in the laboratory to measure water-oil relative permeability curves of a core sample. Experimentally, the unsteady-state core flood technique is more straightforward and less time-consuming compared to the steady-state method. However, the obtained data is limited to a small saturation range, and the associated uncertainty is not negligible. On the other hand, the steady-state method provides a more accurate dataset of two-phase relative permeability needed in the reservoir simulator for a reliable prediction of the high salinity and low salinity waterflood displacement performance. Considering the limitations of the unsteady state method, steady-state high salinity and low salinity brine experiments waterflood experiments were performed to compare the obtained relative permeability curves. The experiments were performed on a carbonate reservoir sample using a live reservoir crude oil under reservoir conditions. The test was designed so that the production and pressure drop curve covers a wider saturation range and provides enough data for analysis. Consequently, reliable relative permeability functions were obtained, initially, for a better comparison and prediction of the high salinity and the low salinity waterflood injections and then, to quantify the effect of low salinity waterflood under steady-state conditions. The results confirm the difference in relative permeability curves between high salinity and low salinity injections due to the micro-dispersion effect, which caused a decrease in water relative permeability and an increase in the oil relative permeability. These results also proved that low salinity brine can change the rock wettability from oil-wet or mixed-wet to more water-wet conditions. Furthermore, the obtained relative permeability curves extend across a substantial saturation range, making it valuable information required for numerical simulations. To the best of our knowledge, the reported data in this work is a pioneer in quantifying the impact of low salinity waterflood at steady-state conditions using a reservoir crude oil and reservoir rock, which is of utmost importance for the oil and gas industry.


2018 ◽  
Vol 127 (3) ◽  
pp. 685-709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. M. Wilmott ◽  
C. J. W. Breward ◽  
S. J. Chapman

SPE Journal ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (05) ◽  
pp. 1154-1166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emad W. Al-Shalabi ◽  
Kamy Sepehrnoori ◽  
Mojdeh Delshad ◽  
Gary Pope

Summary There are few low-salinity-water-injection (LSWI) models proposed for carbonate rocks, mainly because of incomplete understanding of complex chemical interactions of rock/oil/brine. This paper describes a new empirical method to model the LSWI effect on oil recovery from carbonate rocks, on the basis of the history matching and validation of recently published corefloods. In this model, the changes in the oil relative permeability curve and residual oil saturation as a result of the LSWI effect are considered. The water relative permeability parameters are assumed constant, which is a relatively fair assumption on the basis of history matching of coreflood data. The capillary pressure is neglected because we assumed several capillary pressure curves in our simulations in which it had a negligible effect on the history-match results. The proposed model is implemented in the UTCHEM simulator, which is a 3D multiphase flow, transport, and chemical-flooding simulator developed at The University of Texas at Austin (UTCHEM 2000), to match and predict the multiple cycles of low-salinity experiments. The screening criteria for using the proposed LSWI model are addressed in the paper. The developed model gives more insight into the oil-production potential of future waterflood projects with a modified water composition for injection.


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