Abstract
Summary
Barium sulfate scale deposition in the near wellbore, perforations, or production tubing has severely affected well productivity in many North Sea Fields. This is due to the co-mingling of the sulfate-rich seawater used for reservoir sweep with formation water containing high concentrations of barium ions. Mitigation of this problem is generally achieved by regular "squeeze" deployment of scale inhibitor chemicals which retard scale precipitate formation and deposition. However, in some instances, the scale inhibitor is poorly retained within the reservoir rock matrix and short squeeze lifetimes are experienced. The net result in these cases is frequent well interventions which impact on both well productivity and field profitability. To solve this problem, a scale squeeze enhancer has been developed which acts to enhance retention and subsequent release of scale inhibitor in the reservoir. The first field deployment of this technology was in BP's Magnus asset. The trial demonstrated a more than doubling of the squeeze lifetime of an adsorption chemical.
Publisher
Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)
Cited by
12 articles.
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