Petroleum Sulfonates as Oil Displacement Agent and Application

2012 ◽  
Vol 529 ◽  
pp. 512-516
Author(s):  
Sheng Chun Xiong ◽  
Ying He ◽  
Mao Lei Cui

In terms of the condition of injection water after polymer flooding of Gudao oilfield, the following water quickly broke though the bank to the production wells, while most of residual oil remains in the formation. To solve the problem, two kind of petroleum sulfonates made in China are selected to form oil displacement agent (ODA) solution. The petroleum sulfonate available for crude oil of Gudao oilfield with the ultra-low interfacial tension is found by drawing an oil/water interfacial tension contour diagram. The results show that the interfacial tension can be lower than 3.6×10-4mN/m when the active agent contained with 0.25%KPS+0.225%APS, and the agent reduces water resistance of entering the hole to improve sweep coefficient and oil displacement efficiency. The existence of the polymer has no influence on the balanced value of interfacial tension, but just delays the interfacial tension to reach the balance. Pouring into 0.3 pore volume (PV) high-efficient ODA can improve 17% oil recovery. Synergistic effect of two kind of petroleum sulfonate with low cost to enhance oil recovery will have a great prospect for enhanced oil recovery (EOR)

2021 ◽  
pp. 014459872199654
Author(s):  
Yu Bai ◽  
Shangqi Liu ◽  
Guangyue Liang ◽  
Yang Liu ◽  
Yuxin Chen ◽  
...  

Wormlike micelles formed by amidosulfobetaine surfactants present advantage in increasing viscosity, salt-tolerance, thermal-stability and shear-resistance. In the past few years, much attention has been paid on rheology behaviours of amidosulfobetaine surfactants that normally bear C18 or shorter tails. Properties and oil displacement performances of the wormlike micelles formed by counterparts bearing the long carbon chain have not been well documented. In this paper, the various properties of C22-tailed amidosulfobetaine surfactant EHSB under high salinity (TDS = 40g/L) are investigated systematically, including solubility, rheology and interfacial activity. Moreover, its oil displacement performance is studied for the first time. These properties are first compared with those of C16-tailed counterpart HDPS. Results show that the Krafft temperature( TK) of EHSB decreases from above 100°C to 53°C with the increase of TDS to 40 g/L. Increasing concentration of EHSB in the semidilute region induces micelle growth from rod-like micelles to wormlike micelles, and then the worms become entangled or branched to form viscoelastic micelle solution, which will increase the viscosity by several orders of magnitude. The interfacial tension with oil can be reduced to ultra-low level by EHSB solution with concentration below 4.5 mM. Possessing dual functions of mobility control and reducing interfacial tension, wormlike micelles formed by EHSB present a good displacement effect as a flooding system, which is more than 10% higher than HPAM with the same viscosity. Compared with the shorter tailed surfactant, the ultra-long tailed surfactant is more efficient in enhancing viscosity and reducing interfacial tension, so as to enhance more oil recovery. Our work provides a helpful insight for comprehending surfactant-based viscoelastic fluid and provides a new viscoelastic surfactant flooding agent which is quite efficient in chemical flooding of offshore oilfield.


1980 ◽  
Vol 20 (06) ◽  
pp. 459-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.P. Willhite ◽  
D.W. Green ◽  
D.M. Okoye ◽  
M.D. Looney

Abstract Microemulsions located in a narrow single-phase region on the phase diagram for the quaternary system consisting of nonane, isopropyl alcohol, Witco TRS 10-80 petroleum sulfonate, and brine were used to investigate the effect of phase behavior on displacement efficiency of the micellar flooding process. Microemulsion floods were conducted at reservoir rates in 4-ft (1.22-m) Berea cores containing brine and residual nonane. Two floods were made using large (1.0-PV) slugs. A third flood used a 0.1-PV slug followed by a mobility buffer of polyacrylamide. Extensive analyses of the core effluents were made for water, nonane, alcohol, and mono- and polysulfonates. An oil bank developed which broke through at 0.08 to 0.1 PV, and 48 to 700/0 of the oil was recovered in this bank which preceeded breakthrough of monosulfonate and alcohol. Coincidental with the arrival of these components of the slug, the effluent became a milky white macroemulsion which partially separated upon standing. Additional oil was recovered with the macroemulsion. Ultimate recoveries were 90 to 100% of the residual oil. Low apparent interfacial tension was observed between the emulsion and nonane. Alcohol arrived in the effluent at the same time as monosulfonate even though there was extensive adsorption of the sulfonate. Further, alcohol appeared in the effluent well after sulfonate production had ceased, indicating retention of the alcohol in the core. A qualitative model describing the displacement process was inferred from the appearance of the produced fluids and the analyses of the effluents. Introduction Surfactant flooding (micellar or microemulsion) is one of the enhanced oil recovery methods being developed to recover residual oil left after waterflooding. Two approaches to surfactant flooding have evolved in practice. In one, relatively large volumes (0.25 PV) of low-concentration surfactant solution are used to create low-tension waterfloods.1,2 Oil is mobilized by reduction of interfacial tension to levels on the order of about 10−3 dyne/ cm (10−3 mN/m). The second approach involves the application of small volumes (0.03 to 0.1 PV) of high-concentration solutions.3,4 These solutions are miscible to some extent with the formation water and/or crude oil. Consequently, miscibility between the surfactant solution and oil and/or low interfacial tensions contribute to the oil displacement efficiency. The relative importance of these mechanisms has been the subject of several papers5,6 and discussions.7,8


2015 ◽  
Vol 733 ◽  
pp. 43-46
Author(s):  
Jiang Min Zhao ◽  
Tian Ge Li

In this paper, several aspects of the improvement of the oil recovery were analyzed theoretically based on the mechanism that equi-fluidity enhances the pressure gradient. These aspects include the increase of the flow rate and the recovery rate, of the swept volume, and of the oil displacement efficiency. Also, based on the actual situation, the author designed the oil displacement method with gathered energy equi-fluidity, realizing the expectation of enhancing oil recovery with multi-slug and equi-fluidity oil displacement method.


Author(s):  
Ahmed Ragab ◽  
Eman M. Mansour

The enhanced oil recovery phase of oil reservoirs production usually comes after the water/gas injection (secondary recovery) phase. The main objective of EOR application is to mobilize the remaining oil through enhancing the oil displacement and volumetric sweep efficiency. The oil displacement efficiency enhances by reducing the oil viscosity and/or by reducing the interfacial tension, while the volumetric sweep efficiency improves by developing a favorable mobility ratio between the displacing fluid and the remaining oil. It is important to identify remaining oil and the production mechanisms that are necessary to improve oil recovery prior to implementing an EOR phase. Chemical enhanced oil recovery is one of the major EOR methods that reduces the residual oil saturation by lowering water-oil interfacial tension (surfactant/alkaline) and increases the volumetric sweep efficiency by reducing the water-oil mobility ratio (polymer). In this chapter, the basic mechanisms of different chemical methods have been discussed including the interactions of different chemicals with the reservoir rocks and fluids. In addition, an up-to-date status of chemical flooding at the laboratory scale, pilot projects and field applications have been reported.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Peike Gao ◽  
Hongbo Wang ◽  
Guanxi Li ◽  
Ting Ma

With the development of molecular ecology, increasing low-abundance microbial populations were detected in oil reservoirs. However, our knowledge about the oil recovery potential of these populations is lacking. In this study, the oil recovery potential of low-abundance Dietzia that accounts for less than 0.5% in microbial communities of a water-flooding oil reservoir was investigated. On the one hand, Dietzia sp. strain ZQ-4 was isolated from the water-flooding reservoir, and the oil recovery potential was evaluated from the perspective of metabolisms and oil-displacing test. On the other hand, the strain has alkane hydroxylase genes alkB and P450 CYP153 and can degrade hydrocarbons and produce surfactants. The core-flooding test indicated that displacing fluid with 2% ZQ-4 fermentation broth increased 18.82% oil displacement efficiency, and in situ fermentation of ZQ-4 increased 1.97% oil displacement efficiency. Furthermore, the responses of Dietzia in the reservoir accompanied by the nutrient stimulation process was investigated and showed that Dietzia in some oil production wells significantly increased in the initial phase of nutrient injection and sharply decreased along with the continuous nutrient injection. Overall, this study indicates that Dietzia sp. strain has application potential for enhancing oil recovery through an ex situ way, yet the ability of oil recovery in situ based on nutrient injection is limited.


1964 ◽  
Vol 4 (03) ◽  
pp. 231-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.S. Michaels ◽  
Arnold Stancell ◽  
M.C. Porter

MICHAELS, A.S., MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, CAMBRIDGE, MASS. MEMBER AIME STANCELL, ARNOLD, MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, CAMBRIDGE, MASS. PORTER, M.C., MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Abstract Previous laboratory studies have demonstrated that the injection of small quantities of reverse wetting agents during water displacement can increase oil recovery from unconsolidated porous media. In the present investigation, an attempt has been made to determine more fully the effects of reverse wetting treatments and to clarify the mechanism by which increased oil recovery is effected Water-oil displacements were performed in beds of 140–200 mesh silica sand. Hexylamine slugs (injected after 0.25 pore volume of water through put), when adequate in size and concentration, were effective in promoting additional oil recovery. Their effectiveness increased with the quantity of amine injected. However, slugs of sufficient size and concentration to stimulate oil production at water flow rates of 34 ft/day did not do so at 4 ft/day.Visual studies in a glass grid micromodel have shown that the stimulation of oil production, via aqueous bexylamine, is a result of transient changes in the oil wettability of the pore walls. If the am in e slug is of sufficient size and concentration to induce significant changes in the adhesion-tension, large continuous oil masses will be formed. If the superficial water velocity is high enough to result in rapid desorption of the am in e, a favorable "wettability gradient" may be established across the masses; under such conditions, high oil mobility is observed, and increased oil recovery results. Introduction It is generally agreed that the efficiency of oil displacement by water in porous media is limited in part by capillary forces which cause the retention of isolated masses of oil - resulting in the so-called "irreducible minimum oil saturation". Recent estimates indicate that there are about 220 billion bbl of petroleum in United States reservoirs which are not economically recoverable with present techniques (such as water flooding). This amounts to almost five times the known recoverable reserves. It has been recognized for some time that a suitable alteration in the water-oil interfacial tension and/or the contact angle, as measured between the water-oil interface and the solid surface, should result in better displacement efficiency. Surface active agents can be used as interfacial tension depressants to accomplish this objective, but unfortunately, the additional oil recovery is seldom commensurate with the treatment cost.In contrast to interfacial tension depressants, the effect of contact angle alterations on water- oil displacements has received relatively little attention in the literature. It is known that the wettability affects the displacement process. Displacements in water-wet systems generally result in lower residual oil saturations than those in oil-wet systems. The effect of "transient" wettability alterations concurrent with the displacement process have been investigated by Wagner, Leach and coworkers, wherein it has been demonstrated that the establishment of water- wet conditions during water flooding of oil-wet, oil-saturated porous media is accompanied by significant increase in oil displacement efficiency. Michaels and Timmins studied the effects of transient contact angle alterations resulting from chromatographic transport of reverse wetting agents through unconsolidated sand. It was demonstrated that chromatographic transport of short-chain (C4 through C8) primary aliphatic amines can improve oil recovery and that the recovery increases with the quantity of amine injected (i.e., with either the amine concentration or the volume of the slug injected). Circumstantial evidence indicated that the increased displacement efficiency resulted primarily from transient changes in wettability of the porous medium.In the present investigation, additional information has been obtained on the effects of reverse wetting treatments and the mechanism by which increased oil recovery is accomplished. SPEJ P. 231^


2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 1272-1275
Author(s):  
Ji Hong Zhang ◽  
Zhi Ming Zhang ◽  
Xi Ling Chen ◽  
Qing Bin He ◽  
Jin Feng Li

Nanometer microspheres injection is a new deep profile control technology. Nanometer microspheres could inflate with water, resulting in plugging step by step in reservoirs, which could improve the swept efficiency in the reservoir and enhance oil recovery. By using non-homogeneous rectangular core, oil displacement efficiency experiment was conducted for studying the influence of different injection methods on the effect of injection nanometer microspheres. The experimental result shows that, compared with development effect of single-slug injection or triple-slug injection, the one of double-slug injection is better. Nanometer microspheres can enhance oil recovery significantly in medium and low permeability reservoir.


2011 ◽  
Vol 391-392 ◽  
pp. 1047-1050 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Chang Su ◽  
Wen Xiang Wu

By physical simulation experiments, the features of alkali-free binary flooding system (polymer and a new surfactant BS) were contrasted with weak base ternary flooding system and alkali ternary flooding system. The experiment results showed that interfacial tension of BS binary system is the lowest. In the absence of alkali, the viscosity and elasticity of binary system were higher than those of other two ternary flooding systems. By physical simulation experiments with artificial heterogeneous cores, the recovery of BS binary flooding system was 2 percent higher than that of weak base ternary flooding system, and 1.4 percent higher than that of alkali ternary flooding system.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-64
Author(s):  
Ma Wenguo

Characteristics of pore structure have an important influence on the development of water flooding. In order to improve the recovery rate, it is important to investigate the relationship between pore structure and oil displacement efficiency. The permeability of the artificial cores in this experiment is 189×10-3μm2, 741×10-3μm2and 21417×10-3μm2. We used the CT technology method to scan the pore structure of the three cores, and did oil displacement experiment to investigate the effect of pore structure on the oil displacement efficiency. The result shows that the pore and throat common affect oil displacement efficiency: the bigger the pore and throat radius, the better is the oil displacement efficiency; the smaller the pore and throat radius, the worse is the oil displacement efficiency. The experiment studied the influence of pore structure on oil displacement efficiency deep into microcosmic pore structure without damaging the core skeleton, thereby improving the basis of oil recovery from the micro level and the mechanism.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Lanlan Yao ◽  
Zhengming Yang ◽  
Haibo Li ◽  
Bo Cai ◽  
Chunming He ◽  
...  

Chinese shale oil has high recoverable resources and great development potential. However, due to the limitation of development technology, the recovery rate of shale oil is not high. In this paper, the effects of different injection media on the development of shale oil reservoirs in Dongying formation, Qikou depression, Huanghua depression, and Bohai bay basin, were studied by means of imbibition and nitrogen flooding. Combining nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technology with imbibition and gas displacement experiments, the mechanism of shale injected formation water, active water (surfactant), and nitrogen was reproduced. The displacement process of crude oil under different injection media and injection conditions was truly demonstrated, and the relationship between different development methods and the pore boundaries used was clarified. A theoretical basis for the effective development of shale oil was provided. At the same time, Changqing tight oil cores with similar permeability to Dagang shale oil cores were selected for comparison. The results showed that, as the imbibition time of shale samples increased, the imbibition efficiency increased. Pores with T2 < 10 ms contributed the most to imbibition efficiency, with an average contribution greater than 90%. 10 ms < T2 < 100 ms and more than 100 ms pores contributed less to imbibition efficiency. Active water can change the wettability of shale, increase its hydrophilicity, and improve the efficiency of imbibition. The imbibition recovery ratio of injected active water was 17.56% higher than that of injected formation water. Compared with tight sandstone with similar permeability, the imbibition efficiency of shale was lower. As the nitrogen displacement pressure increased, the oil displacement efficiency also increased. The higher the shale permeability was, the greater the displacement efficiency would be. T2 > 100 ms pore throat of shale contributed to the main oil displacement efficiency, with an average oil displacement efficiency contribution of 63.16%. And the relaxation interval 10 < T2 < 100 ms pore throat displacement efficiency contributed to 28.27%. T2 < 10 ms pore throat contributed the least to the oil displacement efficiency, with an average oil displacement efficiency contribution of 8.58%. Compared with tight sandstone with similar permeability, shale had lower oil displacement efficiency. The findings of this study can help for better understanding of the influence of different injection media on shale oil recovery effect.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document