1. Introduction
The concept of smart/modified water flooding was first proposed by Morrow et al. [
1]; leading to further investigations with regards to the impact of injected water composition on oil recovery [
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9]. In simple words, smart/modified water flooding deals with either the addition of active ions/salts or removal of in-active ions/salts from the injection brine. This addition or removal of some specific salts changes not only the salinity but also the hardness of the brine [
10,
11]. Active and non-active ions are known as potential determining ions (PDI) and non-PDI, respectively [
12], and their impact on oil recovery have already been investigated by researchers [
12,
13]. The manipulation of injected brine composition is believed to be able to disturb the established rock-oil-brine (ROB) equilibrium, and detach the oleic polar compounds from the rock surface. Gomari et al., Karoussi and Hamouda and Tahir et al. [
14,
15,
16] showed that sulfate, as the most effective PDI, helps to detach the long chain carboxylic group from the oil-wet surface, and control the further adsorption of these compounds on the rock surface.
Clay and quartz content in the rock matrix are negatively charged surfaces, whereas oil can have positively or negatively charged compounds. The negative polar compounds of oil are attached to rock-surface with the divalent ions bridging (Ca
2+ and Mg
2+ present in formation brine) [
17], as shown in
Figure 1A. The positive polar compounds of the oil are attached to the negatively charged rock surfaces, and the created chemical bondage results in the oil wetting condition of the sandstone reservoir. The negative polar compounds of the oil are replaced by SO
42− through Ca
2+ and Mg
2+, causing bridging of the rock surface, and subsequently altering wettability towards a water-wet state, as presented in
Figure 1B. However, the wettability alteration process is catalyzed if low salinity sulfate-modified water flooding is performed. Low salt will further dilute the divalent cations in the formation brine, and hence weaken the bondage force.
Interfacial interaction between fluids is another recovery mechanism responsible for the additional oil recovery during modified water flooding [
18,
19,
20]. This interfacial interaction (layer) is developed at the oil-brine interface (fluid–fluid interaction) that resulted from the ionic activity between the modified brine and oil polar compounds [
21,
22]. However, this layer is sensitive to the salinity of injected brine. Mahzari and Sohrabi [
23], Morin et al. [
24] and Sohrabi et al. [
25] demonstrated that low salinity flooding produces a more stable and viscoelastic surface at the oil-brine interface. For instance, Morin et al. [
24] found that this stable layer is resistant to rupture, and assists the continuous oil phase transportation in the porous media, hence it contributes to the higher oil recovery.
Based on the common recovery mechanisms of wettability alteration, multicomponent ion exchange (MIE) and change in pH and clay swelling [
26,
27,
28,
29], some researchers refer to low salinity flood (LSF) and smart/modified water flood (SWF) as the same technology [
30]. Others believe both technologies are completely different, based on the microscale ionic activity between fluid–fluid interactions [
31,
32]. Further developments of smart/modified water technology led to the concept of interfacial viscoelasticity (IFV) at the fluids interface as the main recovery mechanism [
16,
20,
22,
33,
34,
35,
36].
Table 1 reviews a list of studies that deal with interfacial interaction between oil and brine, and investigate its impact on oil recovery from sandstone and carbonates.
We have addressed this topic in a previous work, where the results of IFV are presented for the same oil sample and different brine compositions used in this work [
32]. With the gathered observations, it was concluded that a spiked amount of SO
42− worked effectively to design modified water, possibly contributing to the additional oil. Additional evaluations also helped us to find the difference between low salinity and modified water through core plugs and the role of PDI and non-PDI ions [
10,
32].
According to the literature, the basic requirements for a successful application of low salinity and modified water flood are the same and can be summarized as:
- (1)
Reservoir should be oil-wet/mix-wet [
12,
45,
46].
In an oil-wet/intermediate-wet state, oil polar compounds are attached to the rock surface through ionic interactions. Low-salinity/modified water flooding targets these polar compounds, detaching them from the rock surface, as shown in
Figure 1, and hence producing additional oil recovery through wettability alteration from oil-wet/intermediate-wet to water-wet.
- (2)
Existence of polar compounds in the oil [
35,
47,
48].
Polar compounds are mainly composed of asphaltene and naphthenic acids (NAs), and act as surface active compounds. These two surface active compounds are known not only to stabilize water-in-crude oil emulsions, but also to constitute the interfacial film at the fluid–fluid interface. Asphaltene is insoluble in low molecular weight alkanes (n-heptane or n-pentane), but soluble in aromatics (toluene). The interfacial viscoelastic layer at the brine-oil interface is produced, due to the slow and irreversible adsorption process of asphaltene at the fluid interface [
20,
21,
22]. Acevedo et al. [
49] described the positive effects of asphaltene to develop the oil-brine interface’s rheological properties. Another fraction of crude oil is NAs which are composed of cycloaliphatic carboxylic acids (R-COOH) [
47,
50]. These NAs are hydrophilic compounds and are accumulated at the oil-brine interface. Further, NAs can also dissociate in the aqueous phase and reach cations present in the brine to form naphthenic salts. These salts can accumulate at the oil-brine interface. However, the role of NAs remains uncertain because some studies claim that NAs improve oil-brine interface elasticity [
47], while others claim they soften the interfacial film [
51].
- (3)
High content of divalent cations in the formation brine [
2,
52].
Divalent cations provide the bridging connection between negative oil polar compounds and negative-charged rock surface. Mainly, Ca
2+, Mg
2+ play a significant role to create a bond [
17], as shown in
Figure 1.
Previously, experiments were performed using core plugs and sand-packs to prove the effectiveness of modified water technology [
43,
53]. A study from Aghaeifar et al. [
54] reveals that injecting modified water in the secondary mode is an intelligent approach, compared to the injection in the tertiary mode. Further, the synergies of modified water in combination with other EOR technologies have also presented the concept of efficient hybrid EOR technologies [
55,
56,
57,
58]. Modified water and low salinity water flooding in combination with polymer flood showed promising oil recovery results based on the improved sweep efficiency. This work focuses on describing the flow behavior of oil recovery from the injection of low-salinity/sulfate-modified water in combination with polymer. It provides a detailed microscopic visualization and macroscopic observations of the displacement taking place during modified water flooding at a pore-scale level, while evaluating the effect of fluid–fluid/rock–fluid interactions on oil recovery. On one hand, modified water will affect the microscopic sweep efficiency by triggering fluid–fluid and rock–fluid interactions. On the other hand, polymer flooding is expected to improve the macroscopic sweep efficiency, due to a favorable displacement mobility ratio. Hence, the hybrid process is expected to provide the combined benefits of both EOR methods. Modified/low-salinity water injection as a pre-flush is expected to change the reservoir wettability from oil-wet to water-wet and change the fluid distribution in the reservoir. Detached oil droplets are expected to move from small pores to large or medium pores. Polymer flooding after modified brine is expected to produce the redistributed oil phase easily, due to improved sweep efficiency. Low-concentration polymer solutions will be required for a combination with a pre-flush of modified water, which will decrease the cost of EOR projects. Haghighi et al. [
59] presented that mixing of surfactant solution in sulfate-modified water could lead to optimum oil recovery.
This study is the extension of previous experiments performed in another stage of the research [
10,
32]. In this work, microfluidics are used as an approach to justify/understand the results previously obtained while flooding modified water through sandstone cores (core flooding). In addition, micromodel observations are also expected to facilitate the description of the fluid flow dynamics taking place at the microscopic scale. The same fluids as previous publications are utilized, but experiments are performed at a room temperature of 22 °C. Finally, data obtained from the microfluidics flooding in this study are cross analyzed with the core floods data to draw underlying conclusions.
General Methodology and Approach
The proposed workflow, as shown in
Figure 2, helps to create an understanding of the role of the fluid–fluid interfacial interaction as a recovery mechanism other than a wettability alteration. Furthermore, an attempt is made to analyze the success of the mechanism of a hybrid EOR comprising modified water application, in combination with a polymer flood. The following steps were completed to achieve the objectives of this study:
Brine Preparation and Optimization: Four different injection brines were prepared to correlate and cross-validate the fluid–fluid interaction and oil recovery results. The amount of sulfate in the brine and TDS were the key parameters for comparison.
Polymer Diluted Solutions Preparation: Polymer solutions with an oil-to-polymer viscosity ratio of 1 and 2 at a shear rate 10 s−1 were prepared to inject in the tertiary mode for viscosity control.
Interfacial Tension and Interfacial Viscoelasticity Evaluations: Define the ionic activity and chemical interactions between oil polar compounds and four different brines at the liquid-liquid interface.
Wettability and Geometry of the Porous Media: Micromodels with three wettability conditions were used to investigate the role of wettability on the fluid–fluid interfacial interaction. Moreover, two types of water-wet micromodels with different rock geometries/characteristics were further investigated to cross-analyze the results.
Two-phase Modified Brine Injection combined with Polymer Flooding in Micromodels: Flooding experiments were performed with oil-saturated micromodels with an established initial water saturation. Brines were injected as the secondary mode, and polymer flooding was performed in the tertiary mode, with a mix-wet micromodel to evaluate and define the benefits and synergies of the combined EOR process.
Secondary Mode Brine Flooding Comparison of Micromodels and Aged Core Plugs: A comparison was made between the recovery factors obtained from mixed-wet micromodel and aged core plugs, in order to understand and elucidate the fluid–fluid interaction as the recovery mechanism.
4. Conclusions
Based on the experimental investigation and collected data outlined in this study, it can be concluded that the mechanisms of both wettability alteration and fluid interfacial interaction are of great importance for reducing the ROS. However, in the oil-wet micromodel, only the fluid–fluid interaction helped to produce the additional oil from SSW+2SO42−. Additionally, there was no rock–fluid interaction in the oil-wet micromodel. One reason for this is that the oil-wet condition is achieved by applying a chemical layer adsorbed at the matrix structure, which is difficult to change to water-wet by modified water. The results also confirm that SSW+2SO42−, or low-salt water flooding, work efficiently only in oil-wet and complex-wet reservoir systems (for the conditions presented in this work). In a water-wet system, the fluid–fluid/rock–fluid interaction concept could not work in a promising manner.
Moreover, it was observed that polymer injection with a viscosity equal to that of oil can contribute to additional oil recovery through the micromodels. Polymer flooding after SSW+2SO42− contributed 2% higher recovery, compared to polymer injection after SSW, which is proposed as the appropriate combination of modified water flooding following polymer flooding. Subsequently, it was observed that the pore distribution and rock properties do not have a significant impact on oil recovery under the same wettability conditions (for the conditions presented in this work). Comparing the two types of water-wet models (artificial and real structure), nearly the same RF of 55% through SSW flooding was achieved.