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1.
ACS Omega ; 8(27): 24426-24440, 2023 Jul 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37457488

RESUMO

A polymer flooding workflow was developed to diminish polymer degradation and minimize formation damage under high-temperature-high-salinity reservoir conditions by using a shear-thickening polymer (SAP) prepared in engineered waters. First, rock characterization, fluid-fluid analysis, and formation damage tests were conducted to shortlist the potential formulations of polymer solutions based on higher viscosity and less formation damage. Second, polymer core flooding experiments were conducted under reservoir conditions to investigate the performance of candidate polymer solutions on oil displacement efficiency (DE). For the first time, the compatibility between SAP and engineered water was systematically tested. The factors affecting bulk rheology, polymer retention, and oil DE, including polymer concentration, polymer type, salinity, and hardness, were experimentally investigated and compared with regular partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide (HPAM). Results showed that compared with HPAM, the SAP solution led to lower formation damage and overall higher oil DE, especially in the first 0.4 pore volume of polymer injection. When using SAP prepared in twice-diluted and hardness-stripped seawater under low-salinity formation brine conditions, the DE was the highest (69.04%). The formation damage was reduced when the salinity and hardness of the base fluid were lower, whereas stripping the hardness had a more pronounced effect on reducing formation damage. The improved oil recovery potential due to the shear-thickening feature of SAP solutions and their better compatibility with engineered water compared to regular HPAM has been proven in this study. It was also found that the lower salinity and hardness of the engineered water further stimulated the enhanced oil recovery potential of SAP solutions. The contribution of this work relies on revealing how SAP prepared in different engineered waters affects incremental oil DE under harsh reservoir conditions based on experimental evidence and mechanism analysis. The novelty of this work lays the foundation for investigating the potential application of SAP on a pilot scale.

2.
ACS Omega ; 8(13): 11837-11851, 2023 Apr 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37033837

RESUMO

Misrepresentation of the wettability of a reservoir can lead to potentially low ultimate hydrocarbon recovery resulting in substantial economic losses. At the same time, it is impossible to determine the wettability of a reservoir across its length and breadth on a continuous basis using standard procedures. This work presents the development and standardization of a quick, easy, and low-cost wettability measurement method using the adherence tendency of rock particles in the oil or aqueous phase. The most important aspect of this study was establishing the optimum particle size for sustained floatation and balancing the buoyancy and gravity effect. The results show that the particles sink with a larger than optimum particle size because of the gravity effect. Similarly, the particles would float if they are smaller than optimum due to buoyancy and viscosity advantages. A new scale is designed, and the midpoint analysis shows that a 63-90 µm particle size is the ideal size range for the carbonate reservoir's wettability measurements, as the midpoint of the size distribution coincides with the standard Amott-Harvey (A-H) index. However, this size range is found to be wider for oil-wet particles. The floating particle method has several advantages over the established methods once standardized against a reliable process. Not only is the process fast but it can be performed with basic laboratory tools and does not require a high skill set. Most importantly, reliable wettability information can be obtained from drill cuttings and core fragments, enabling the determination of reservoir wettability on a continuum basis and not as a point basis, thus providing a more reliable average value, particularly for heterogeneous and unconsolidated reservoirs.

3.
ACS Omega ; 6(47): 31646-31657, 2021 Nov 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34869988

RESUMO

Hydraulic fracturing is a widely used technology to enhance the productivity of low-permeability reservoirs. Fracturing fluids using guar as the rheology builder leaves aside residual polymer layers over the fractured surface, resulting in a restricted matrix to fracture flow, causing reduced well productivity and injectivity. This research developed a specialized enzyme breaker and evaluated its efficiency in breaking linear and cross-linked guar-polymer gel as a function of time, temperature, and breaker concentration targeting a high-temperature carbonate reservoir. The study began with developing a high-temperature stable galacto-mannanase enzyme using the "protein-engineering" approach, followed by the optimization of fracturing fluids and breaker concentrations measuring their rheological properties. The thermal stability of the enzyme breaker vis-à-vis viscosity reduction and the degradation pattern of the linear and cross-linked gel observed from the break tests showed that the enzyme is stable and active up to 120 °C and can reduce viscosity by more than 99%. Further studies conducted using a high-temperature high-pressure HT-HP filter press for the visual inspection of polymer cake quality, filtration loss rates, and cake dissolution efficiency showed that a 6 h enzyme treatment degrades the filter cake by 94-98% compared to 60-70% degradation in 72 h of the natural degradation process. Coreflooding studies, under simulated reservoir conditions, showed the severity of postfracture damage (up to 99%), which could be restored up to 95% on enzyme treatment depending on the treatment protocol and the type of fracturing gel used.

4.
ACS Omega ; 5(40): 25984-25992, 2020 Oct 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33073125

RESUMO

Significant formation damage can occur during drilling operations because of the invasion of drilling fluid fines and filtrates that lead to pore blocking and saturation alteration mechanisms. This study demonstrates the ways to minimize drilling fluid-related damage and the removal of the deposited filter cake in the carbonate reservoir through judicious selection of bridging particles using "ideal packing theory" and formulation of an enzyme-based clean-up fluid with an acid precursor. The polymer-based drill-in-fluid with a mixed grade of CaCO3 bridging particles resulted in a compact filter cake with reduced filtration loss preventing internal pore damage significantly. Several ester hydrolysis reaction kinetics were studied, and finally, one combination was chosen as the suitable acid precursor because of its ability to generate a required concentration of acid within the downhole condition. The return permeability of mud-damaged carbonate core plugs was higher than 95% after exposure to the clean-up solution. The corrosion rates were found to be significantly below the industry limits, and the use of acid corrosion inhibitors is eliminated.

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