Polymer Flow in Porous Media: Relevance to Enhanced Oil Recovery
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theory
2.1. In-Situ Rheology
- (I)
- unlike rheometers, porous media exhibit an inherently complex geometry;
- (II)
- phenomena such as mechanical degradation may change rheological properties;
- (III)
- although they only demonstrate shear thinning behavior in rheometers, polymer solutions may exhibit apparent shear thickening behavior above a certain critical flow rate;
- (IV)
- due to the tortuosity of porous media and existence of several contraction-expansion channels, polymer solutions are exposed to a wide range of shear rates at each flow rate and where extensional viscosity becomes more dominant, resulting in significantly different rheology behavior compared to bulk flow.
- Analytical solutions for a power-law fluid () at a given flow rate through a capillary tube with an arbitrary radius (R) can be defined by Equation (2). By comparing Equation (2) with the Poiseuille volumetric flow rate for Newtonian fluids in a tube (Equation (3)), an apparent viscosity and shear rate can be obtained from Equations (4) and (5), respectively.
- The analytical equation in a single tube (Equation (5)) can be extended to account for real porous media by using the capillary bundle approach [23,24,25]. An equivalent radius of a capillary bundle model for porous media with known porosity (φ), permeability (K) and tortuosity (ψ) can be obtained by Equation (6). By calculating the Darcy velocity and substituting the equivalent radius (Equation (6)) into Equation (5), the apparent shear rate as a function of Darcy velocity can be obtained by Equation (7).
- The above expressions are considered as an analytical basis for calculating apparent viscosity in porous media. Based on Equation (7), a simplified linear correlation between apparent shear rate and Darcy velocity is generally suggested, i.e., Equation (8), in which the correction factor (α) is the key factor. Some proposed equations for the correction factor are summarized in Table 1. By comparing different coefficients, different values for apparent viscosity may be obtained.
- It neglects complex features of porous media such as tortuosity and pore size distribution.
- It assumes unidirectional flow as it neglects interconnectivity between pores.
- It cannot be representative for flow in an anisotropic medium due to its assumption of unique permeability along propagation direction.
- It assumes a single radius along bundles with no variation in cross-sectional area. The contraction-expansion feature of non-Newtonian flow in porous media is of high importance, especially when studying extensional viscosity, yield stress and elasticity.
- It is generally developed based on rheological models in which analytical solutions for velocity profiles are available (e.g., power-law and Ellis model). Analytical solutions for some models (e.g., Carreau model) are quite difficult and the equation for velocity is implicit (Equation (10) for the Carreau model) and needs to be solved iteratively.
2.2. Extensional Viscosity
2.2.1. Polymer Concentration
2.2.2. Molecular Weight
2.2.3. Salinity Effect
2.2.4. Degree of Hydrolysis
2.2.5. Pressure and Temperature Effect
2.2.6. Porous Media Properties
2.3. Injectivity
3. Radial In-Situ Rheology
4. Materials and Methods
5. Polymer In-Situ Rheology in Linear Cores
6. Polymer In-Situ Rheology in Radial Flow
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
A | Cross section area |
C | Power-law constant |
Cp | Polymer concentration |
Grain size diameter | |
De | Deborah number |
h | Disk thickness |
H | Constant, equation 11 |
k | Constant, equation 18 |
Kei | Effective permeability to polymer |
K | Permeability |
L | Length of model |
Polymer molecular weight | |
N1 | Normal stress difference |
n | Ellis, Carreau or power-law constant |
P | Pressure |
Q | Flow rate |
R | Radius |
re | Disk radius |
rw | Injection well radius |
RF | Resistance factor |
RRF | Residual resistance factor |
Req | Equivalent radius obtained from Blake-Kozeny model |
Sw | Water saturation |
T | Temperature |
Tr | Trouton ratio |
U | Darcy velocity |
Wi | Weissenberg number |
I | Injectivity |
Correction factor | |
Constant, equation 10 | |
Angular velocity | |
Stretch rate | |
Pressure drop | |
Shear rate | |
Ellis model parameter | |
Effective shear rate | |
Apparent shear rate | |
Critical shear rate | |
Polymer relaxation time | |
Zimm relaxation time | |
Viscosity | |
Apparent viscosity | |
Effective viscosity | |
Upper Newtonian plateau | |
Solvent viscosity | |
Shear rate viscosity | |
Elongational viscosity | |
Lower Newtonian plateau | |
Porosity | |
Tortuosity | |
Characteristic relaxation time of fluid | |
Characteristic time of porous media |
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Model | Equation for Correction Factor (α) | Description |
---|---|---|
Analytical solution | n is the power index in power-law region | |
Hirasaki and Pope [26] | n is the power index in power-law region | |
Cannella et al. [16] | n is the power index in power-law region, Sw is water saturation, β is a constant equal to 6. |
Model | Equation | Description |
---|---|---|
Masuda et al. [77] | They used the inverse of the shear rate for θp. Uw is the Darcy velocity, krw is the water relative permeability, Sw is water saturation and is a constant equal to 3.97C, where C is an empirical correlation factor to account for the difference between an equivalent capillary model and real porous media | |
Hirasaki and Pope [26] Haas and Durst [78] Heemskerk et al. [75] |
Model | Equation | Description |
---|---|---|
Hirasaki and Pope [26] | ||
Masuda et al. [77] | where Cc and mc are constant and relate to pore geometry | |
Delshad et al. [61] | is the characteristic relaxation time and can be calculated by dynamic frequency sweep test in the laboratory. Some empirical correlations are also proposed for dependency of different parameters on polymer concentration | |
Stavland et al. [62] | m is a non-zero tuning parameter which is known as the elongation exponent and depends on the molecular weight and demonstrates linear correlation with. α in the listed formulation is considered 2.5 |
Ion | Concentration (ppm, w/w) |
---|---|
Na | 1741 |
K | 28 |
Ca | 26 |
Mg | 17 |
S | 160 |
Cl | 2687 |
TDS | 4659 |
Ionic strength | 0.082 |
Hardness | 43 |
Experiment | Conc. | L (cm) | D (cm) | ϕ (-) | Kwi (Darcy) | Kwf (Darcy) | RRF (-) | (cP) | (cP) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No oil | 500 ppm | 9.54 | 3.77 | 0.24 | 2.48 | 1.35 | 1.84 | 6.81 | 6.62 |
No oil | 1500 ppm | 4.89 | 3.79 | 0.24 | 1.99 | 0.32 | 6.29 | 33.76 | 32.87 |
With oil, not aged | 500 ppm | 10.44 | 3.78 | 0.23 | 1.83 | 0.36 | 5.08 | 6.65 | 6.77 |
With oil, aged | 500 ppm | 9.85 | 3.78 | 0.23 | 2.27 | 0.27 | 8.41 | 6.99 | 5.90 |
Experiment | Diameter (cm) | Thickness (cm) | Well Radius (cm) | ϕ (-) | PV (mL) | Soi (frac) | Sorw (frac) | Kw,abs (Darcy) | Kw,Sorw (Darcy) | Kwf (Darcy) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No oil | 30.00 | 2.20 | 0.15 | 0.24 | 373 | n.a. | n.a. | 2.600 | n.a. | 0.056 |
With oil | 29.90 | 2.21 | 0.30 | 0.23 | 352 | 0.91 | 0.22 | 1.551 | 0.041 | 0.039 |
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Skauge, A.; Zamani, N.; Gausdal Jacobsen, J.; Shaker Shiran, B.; Al-Shakry, B.; Skauge, T. Polymer Flow in Porous Media: Relevance to Enhanced Oil Recovery. Colloids Interfaces 2018, 2, 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/colloids2030027
Skauge A, Zamani N, Gausdal Jacobsen J, Shaker Shiran B, Al-Shakry B, Skauge T. Polymer Flow in Porous Media: Relevance to Enhanced Oil Recovery. Colloids and Interfaces. 2018; 2(3):27. https://doi.org/10.3390/colloids2030027
Chicago/Turabian StyleSkauge, Arne, Nematollah Zamani, Jørgen Gausdal Jacobsen, Behruz Shaker Shiran, Badar Al-Shakry, and Tormod Skauge. 2018. "Polymer Flow in Porous Media: Relevance to Enhanced Oil Recovery" Colloids and Interfaces 2, no. 3: 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/colloids2030027
APA StyleSkauge, A., Zamani, N., Gausdal Jacobsen, J., Shaker Shiran, B., Al-Shakry, B., & Skauge, T. (2018). Polymer Flow in Porous Media: Relevance to Enhanced Oil Recovery. Colloids and Interfaces, 2(3), 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/colloids2030027