Author:
Yun Wonjin,Chang Sehoon,Cogswell Daniel A.,Eichmann Shannon L.,Gizzatov Ayrat,Thomas Gawain,Al-Hazza Naimah,Abdel-Fattah Amr,Wang Wei
Abstract
AbstractEnhanced oil recovery (EOR) plays a significant role in improving oil production. Tertiary EOR, including surfactant flooding, can potentially mobilize residual oil after water flooding. Prior to the field deployment, the surfactant performance must be evaluated using site-specific crude oil at reservoir conditions. Core flood experiments are common practice to evaluate surfactants for oil displacement efficiency using core samples. Core flood experiments, however, are expensive and time-consuming and do not allow for pore scale observations of fluid-fluid interactions. This work introduces the framework to evaluate the performance of EOR surfactants via a Reservoir-on-a-Chip approach, which uses microfluidic devices to mimic the oil reservoir. A unique feature of this study is the use of chemically modified micromodels such that the pore surfaces are representative of carbonate reservoir rock. To represent calcium carbonate reservoir pores, the inner channels of glass microfluidic devices were coated with thin layers of calcium carbonate nanocrystals and the surface was modified to exhibit oil-wet conditions through a crude oil aging process. During surfactant screening, oil and water phases were imaged by fluorescence microscopy to reveal the micro to macro scale mechanisms controlling surfactant-assisted oil recovery. The role of the interfacial tension (IFT) and wettability in the microfluidic device was simulated using a phase-field model and compared to laboratory results. We demonstrated the effect of low IFT at the oil-water interface and wettability alteration on surfactant-enhanced oil displacement efficiency; thus providing a time-efficient and low-cost strategy for quantitative and qualitative assessment. In addition, this framework is an effective method for pre-screening EOR surfactants for use in carbonate reservoirs prior to further core and field scale testing.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference59 articles.
1. Lifton, V. A. Microfluidics: an enabling screening technology for enhanced oil recovery (EOR). Lab. Chip 16, 1777–1796 (2016).
2. Shah, D. O. Surface Phenomena in Enhanced Oil Recovery. (Springer US, 2013).
3. Lake, L. W., Johns, R., Rossen, B. & Pope, G. Fundamentals of Enhanced Oil Recovery. (Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2014).
4. Datta, S. S., Ramakrishnan, T. S. & Weitz, D. A. Mobilization of a trapped non-wetting fluid from a three-dimensional porous medium. Phys. Fluids 26, 022002 (2014).
5. Manrique, E. J., Muci, V. E. & Gurfinkel, M. E. EOR Field Experiences in Carbonate Reservoirs in the United States. SPE Reserv. Eval. Eng. 10, 667–686 (2007).
Cited by
67 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献