TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigation of the Effect of Residual Oil and Wettability on Sulfonated Polymer Retention in Carbonate under High-Salinity Conditions
AU - Alfazazi, Umar
AU - Thomas, Nithin Chacko
AU - Al-Shalabi, Emad Walid
AU - AlAmeri, Waleed
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 Society of Petroleum Engineers.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Polymer flooding in carbonate reservoirs is greatly affected by polymer retention, which is mainly due to adsorption by polymer-rock surface interactions. Consequently, this leads to a delay in polymer front propagation and related oil recovery response. This work investigates the effects of residual oil (Sor) and wettability on sulfonated-based (ATBS) polymer retention under the conditions of high salinity and moderate temperature. Polymer single- and two-phase dynamic adsorption tests as well as bulk and in-situ rheological experiments were conducted on outcrop carbonate cores in the presence of a high-salinity brine of 243,000 ppm at a temperature of 50°C. A total of four corefloods were conducted on Indiana limestone core samples with similar petrophysical properties. Overall, polymer adsorption was found to be low and within the acceptable range for application in carbonate reservoirs in the absence and presence of Sor. Furthermore, the polymer adsorption and in-situ rheology tests highlighted the significance of oil presence in the core samples, where retention was found to be around 40–50 µg/g-rock and 25–30 µg/g-rock in the absence and at Sor, respectively. An additional 50% reduction in retention was observed on the aged core sample that is more oil-wet. Polymer retention/adsorption was measured by double slug and mass balance techniques, and the results from both methods were in agreement with less than 7% difference. Inaccessible pore volume (IPV) was also calculated based on the double slug method and was found to be in the range of 23% to 28%, which was qualitatively supported by in-situ saturation monitoring obtained from an X-ray computed tomography (CT) scanner. The ATBS-based polymer showed excellent results for applications in carbonate without considerable polymer loss or plugging. This paper provides valuable insights into the impacts of residual oil and wettability on polymer adsorption, supported by CT in-situ saturation monitoring, which is necessary to avoid unrepresentative and inflated polymer retentions in oil reservoirs.
AB - Polymer flooding in carbonate reservoirs is greatly affected by polymer retention, which is mainly due to adsorption by polymer-rock surface interactions. Consequently, this leads to a delay in polymer front propagation and related oil recovery response. This work investigates the effects of residual oil (Sor) and wettability on sulfonated-based (ATBS) polymer retention under the conditions of high salinity and moderate temperature. Polymer single- and two-phase dynamic adsorption tests as well as bulk and in-situ rheological experiments were conducted on outcrop carbonate cores in the presence of a high-salinity brine of 243,000 ppm at a temperature of 50°C. A total of four corefloods were conducted on Indiana limestone core samples with similar petrophysical properties. Overall, polymer adsorption was found to be low and within the acceptable range for application in carbonate reservoirs in the absence and presence of Sor. Furthermore, the polymer adsorption and in-situ rheology tests highlighted the significance of oil presence in the core samples, where retention was found to be around 40–50 µg/g-rock and 25–30 µg/g-rock in the absence and at Sor, respectively. An additional 50% reduction in retention was observed on the aged core sample that is more oil-wet. Polymer retention/adsorption was measured by double slug and mass balance techniques, and the results from both methods were in agreement with less than 7% difference. Inaccessible pore volume (IPV) was also calculated based on the double slug method and was found to be in the range of 23% to 28%, which was qualitatively supported by in-situ saturation monitoring obtained from an X-ray computed tomography (CT) scanner. The ATBS-based polymer showed excellent results for applications in carbonate without considerable polymer loss or plugging. This paper provides valuable insights into the impacts of residual oil and wettability on polymer adsorption, supported by CT in-situ saturation monitoring, which is necessary to avoid unrepresentative and inflated polymer retentions in oil reservoirs.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85178394294&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2118/207892-pa
DO - 10.2118/207892-pa
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85178394294
SN - 1086-055X
JO - SPE Journal
JF - SPE Journal
M1 - SPE-207892-PA
ER -