Rock–Oil–Brine Dominant Mechanisms in Smart Water Flooding
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Section
2.1. Brines
2.2. Crude Oil
2.3. Rock Samples
2.3.1. Berea Slices
2.3.2. Berea Samples
2.4. Contact Angle and IFT Measurements
2.5. Coreflooding Tests
2.6. Capillary Electrophoresis (CE)
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Effect of Droplet Size and Stabilization Time on Contact Angle
3.2. Effect of Brine Concentration on Contact Angle
Effect of Brine Concentration on Interfacial Tension (IFT): Oil–Brine Tests
3.3. Coreflooding Tests
3.4. Ionic Analysis
3.4.1. Coreflooding Displacement in the Absence of Oil–Fluid–Rock Interaction Evaluation
3.4.2. Coreflooding Displacement: Crude Oil–Rock–Brine
- Chloride and sodium dilution effects are observed. However, Cl− concentration in the effluents reached the injected concentration after 1.5 PVi, showing a slight increase during the second half of the flood (up to 53 ppm above the injected concentration). This behavior is similar to the one observed during the experiment without oil (Figure 10).
- Potassium concentration showed a similar trend to that observed during the coreflood test without oil. However, the injected concentration was reached faster (≈3.5 PVi) when the oil phase was included.
- The concentration of cations (Na+, Mg2+, and Ca2+) not included in the injected brine was produced during 6 PVi. Sodium showed its dilution stabilizing (40–60 ppm) until the end of the flood. Mg2+ elution evidenced its dilution and increased up to 58 ppm, decreasing gradually until reaching 18 ppm after the injection of 6 PVs. Nevertheless, calcium concentration showed completely different behavior. Ca2+ initially decreases due to the dilution effects of the FB saturating (Swi) the core plug reaching a minimum of 48 ppm (≈0.75 PVi). At this point, its concentration started increasing and stayed above 126 ppm for 2 PVi, and after 3 PVi, Ca2+ started decreasing but stayed above 45 ppm throughout the displacement test.
- Finally, the effluents of this coreflood showed the presence of low-molecular-weight (MW) organic anions such as formate (99–57 ppm) and acetate (63–43 ppm) at the early stages of production (0.5 PVi). However, these organic anions were not identified beyond this point.
- The rapid salinity reduction was evidenced during the CaCl2 (DE4) injection, especially for chloride and sodium, given the major differences between the FB and the injected brine.
- A sharp chloride dilution effect (difference of 4919 ppm) was observed. The Cl− in the effluents reached the injected concentration after 1.5 PVi, staying close but always above (maximum of 344 ppm) the injected concentration of 1309 ppm throughout the displacement test. This behavior was also observed in the single-phase coreflood for at least 10 PVi until a decrease in Cl- concentration was recorded (Figure 10).
- Calcium concentration injected in the CaCl2 brine was 219 ppm higher than that included in the field brine (FB). Therefore, the dilution effect observed between 0.5 and 1.5 PVi is attributed to the displacement of the FB by CaCl2. After the 1.5 PVi, Ca2+ remained remarkably stable and close to the injected concentration (722 ppm). This suggests that the calcium in the crude oil (Table 2), exchanged with other low-salinity brines (Figure 14 and Figure 15), is somehow equilibrated with the Ca2+ in the injected brine, diminishing its exchange capacity.
- Sodium was not present in the CaCl2 brine injected, but it helps demonstrate this cation’s dilution effect during the coreflood test. Na+ reached a minimum concentration of 61 ppm at 2.5 PVi. Beyond this point, sodium was detected in some samples with concentrations ranging from 3 to 55 ppm. Other cations (K+ and Mg2+) not included in the injected brine showed a similar trend. Mg2+ also showed a dilution effect, and its concentration remained stable and higher (26 to 260 ppm) than the injected concentration (40 ppm) for 2.75 PVi. Still, it was not further detected during the second half of the flood. Potassium was only detected after 1 PVi for 1 pore volume (60 to 100 ppm).
- Effluents of this experiment also showed the presence of low-MW organic anions such as formate (180–7 ppm) and acetate (93–21 ppm) before the first PVi. It is worth mentioning that these carboxylate concentration were higher than those identified during DE3 injecting KCl (Figure 15).
3.4.3. Coreflooding Displacement Comparison
- Cl− concentration [Cl−] eluted during the displacement efficiency (with oil) is higher than the single-phase experiment.
- [Cl−] is very similar in both types of corefloods (no major effect is evidenced due to the presence of oil).
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ion | Field Brine [mg/L] |
---|---|
Na+ | 3297.39 |
K+ | 81.13 |
Ca++ | 370.62 |
Mg++ | 61.41 |
Ba++ | 36.55 |
Sr++ | 23.25 |
HCO3− | 1521.15 |
SO4− | 4.00 |
Cl− | 5366.23 |
TDS | 10,800.00 |
Property | Unit | Value |
---|---|---|
Saturated compounds | (wt%) | 41.94 |
Aromatic compounds | (wt%) | 30.85 |
Resins | (wt%) | 22.72 |
Asphaltene content | (wt%) | 4.49 |
Acid number (AN) | (mg KOH/g oil) | 0.21 |
Specific gravity | °API | 27.00 |
Viscosity 60 °C | cp | 10.50 |
Elemental Chemical Composition by EDXS | |
---|---|
Major Elements Detected | % |
SiO2 | 90.1 |
Al2O3 | 6.93 |
K2O | 1.85 |
Fe2O3 | 0.7 |
TiO2 | 0.21 |
CaO | 0.06 |
Berea Slices—Contact Angle Determinations | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Length (cm) | Diameter (cm) | Pore Volume (cm3) | Porosity (%) | Klinkenberg Permeability (mD) | |
0.9–1.0 | 3.70 | 14.9 | 22.2 | 576 | |
Berea plugs—Coreflooding Tests | |||||
Water–Oil displacement | 6.75 | 3.84 | 16.7 | 21.6 | 557 |
Water displacement | 6.94 | 3.84 | 17.2 | 21.6 | 547 |
Brine | [ ] | IFT | SD | Brine | [ ] | IFT | SD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ppm | [mN/m] | ppm | [mN/m] | ||||
NaCl | 1000 | 32.78 | 0.15 | MgCl2 | 1000 | 32.24 | 0.15 |
3000 | 32.39 | 0.14 | 3000 | 32.81 | 0.17 | ||
5000 | 32.64 | 0.13 | 5000 | 32.45 | 0.17 | ||
KCl | 1000 | 32.53 | 0.18 | CaCl2 | 1000 | 32.56 | 0.16 |
3000 | 32.07 | 0.11 | 3000 | 32.54 | 0.17 | ||
5000 | 32.38 | 0.14 | 5000 | 32.25 | 0.13 | ||
DW | – | 35.24 | 0.14 | FB | 10,800 | 30.06 | 0.14 |
Parameter | Value |
---|---|
Confining pressure (psi) | 2000 |
Pore pressure (psi) | 200 |
Temperature (°C) | 60 |
Brine rate (mL/min) Displacement efficiencies | 0.167 |
Oil/brine resaturation rate (mL/min) | 0.1–0.2 |
Brine viscosity at 60 °C [cP] | 0.48 |
Crude oil viscosity at 60 °C [cP] | 10.5 |
DE1 FB | DE2 MgCl2 1000 ppm | DE3 KCl 1000 ppm | DE4 CaCl2 2000 ppm | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sw | 26.36% | 19.85% | 10.26% | 14.42% |
Soi | 73.64% | 80.15% | 89.74% | 85.58% |
%DE | 41.52% | 32.06% | 37.96% | 60.20% |
Cl− | Na+ | K+ | Mg2+ | Ca2+ | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ID | Brine | ppm | ppm | ppm | ppm | ppm |
DE1 | FB | 6228.0 | 3166.0 | ND | 40.4 | 503.1 |
DE2 | MgCl2 | 791.2 | - | - | 255.3 | - |
DE3 | KCl | 567.8 | - | 524.3 | - | - |
DE4 | CaCl2 | 1308.7 | - | - | - | 722.3 |
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Maya, G.; Carreño Otero, A.L.; Monares Bueno, F.L.; Romero Bohórquez, A.R.; Cortés, F.B.; Franco, C.A.; Manrique, E. Rock–Oil–Brine Dominant Mechanisms in Smart Water Flooding. Energies 2023, 16, 2043. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16042043
Maya G, Carreño Otero AL, Monares Bueno FL, Romero Bohórquez AR, Cortés FB, Franco CA, Manrique E. Rock–Oil–Brine Dominant Mechanisms in Smart Water Flooding. Energies. 2023; 16(4):2043. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16042043
Chicago/Turabian StyleMaya, Gustavo, Aurora L. Carreño Otero, Fabián L. Monares Bueno, Arnold R. Romero Bohórquez, Farid B. Cortés, Camilo A. Franco, and Eduardo Manrique. 2023. "Rock–Oil–Brine Dominant Mechanisms in Smart Water Flooding" Energies 16, no. 4: 2043. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16042043
APA StyleMaya, G., Carreño Otero, A. L., Monares Bueno, F. L., Romero Bohórquez, A. R., Cortés, F. B., Franco, C. A., & Manrique, E. (2023). Rock–Oil–Brine Dominant Mechanisms in Smart Water Flooding. Energies, 16(4), 2043. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16042043