Abstract
Abstract
Carbonate's extreme heterogeneity in the form of fracture corridors and super-permeability thief zones challenges the efficient sweep of oil in both secondary and tertiary recovery operations. In such reservoirs, conformance control is crucial to ensure injected water and any EOR chemicals optimally contact the remaining oil with minimal throughput. Gel-based conformance control has been successfully applied on both sandstone and carbonate reservoirs. Achieving effective in-depth conformance control in high-temperature reservoirs, however, remains a challenge due to severe gel syneresis and significant reduction in gelation time. The first step to improve the performance of gel in these challenging environments is the accurate understanding of gel conformance control mechanism inside reservoir rocks.
In this work, a laboratory study was conducted to evaluate a polyacrylamide/chromium gel system for application in a high-temperature and high-salinity (HTHS) carbonate reservoir. Oil displacement experiments on carbonate core samples, combined with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements were performed to demonstrate oil recovery improvement by gel treatment and illustrate the mechanisms of the improvement. In these tests, the gel solution was injected into specially prepared heterogeneous carbonate composite core samples, in which different configurations of high-permeability channels were created. Gel treatment was conducted after waterflooding and was followed by chase waterflooding. Oil recovery improvement by gel treatment was 18% of original oil in core (OOIC) in the composite core with high permeability channels extending mid-way through the composite while the improvement was 38% OOIC in the composite core with channels extending all the way through the composite. Detailed spatial fluid variations inside the core samples before and after gel treatment were closely monitored using advanced low-field NMR techniques. Heavy water (D2O) was used in place of water to enhance the contrast between oil and brine for NMR by eliminating the protons in the aqueous phase. NMR measurements indicated that the bypassed oil during waterflooding was effectively recovered after gel treatment.
Results in this study demonstrate the potential of the studied gel system and its favorable impact on sweep efficiency improvement application in HTHS carbonate reservoirs. The NMR study enhances our understanding of how gel helps improve sweep efficiency of subsequent floods through blocking/reducing the permeability of highly-conductive zones.
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