Abstract
There are few low-salinity-water-injection (LSWI) models proposed for carbonate rocks, mainly because of incomplete understanding of complex chemical interactions of rock/oil/brine. This paper describes a new empirical method to model the LSWI effect on oil recovery from carbonate rocks, on the basis of the history matching and validation of recently published corefloods. In this model, the changes in the oil relative permeability curve and residual oil saturation as a result of the LSWI effect are considered. The water relative permeability parameters are assumed constant, which is a relatively fair assumption on the basis of history matching of coreflood data. The capillary pressure is neglected because we assumed several capillary pressure curves in our simulations in which it had a negligible effect on the history-match results. The proposed model is implemented in the UTCHEM simulator, which is a 3D multiphase flow, transport, and chemical-flooding simulator developed at The University of Texas at Austin (UTCHEM 2000), to match and predict the multiple cycles of low-salinity experiments. The screening criteria for using the proposed LSWI model are addressed in the paper. The developed model gives more insight into the oil-production potential of future waterflood projects with a modified water composition for injection.
Original language | British English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 1154-1166 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | SPE Journal |
Volume | 20 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Oct 2015 |