SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 12,
Number 3,
June 2009,
pp. 361-370
Summary
Laboratory surfactant and hot-water floods have shown a great potential in
increasing oil recovery for reservoirs that are naturally fractured and have
low-permeability, mixed-wet matrix rocks. Fractured, mixed-wet formations
usually have poor waterflood performance because the injected water tends to
flow in the fractures and imbibition into the matrix is not very significant.
Surfactants have been used to change the wettability for increasing the oil
recovery by increased imbibition of the water into the rock matrix. The
mechanisms for oil recovery are combined effects of reduced interfacial tension
(IFT), reduced mobility ratio, and wettability alteration. The goal of this
research is to adapt an existing numerical reservoir simulator to model
chemical processes leading to wettability alteration in naturally fractured
reservoirs. Surfactants have been used to change the wettability, with the goal
of increasing the oil recovery by increased imbibition of the water into the
rock matrix. Reservoir simulation is required to scale up the process from
laboratory to field conditions, as well as to understand and interpret
reservoir data. A chemical-flooding simulator is adapted to model
improved-oil-recovery processes involving wettability alteration using
surfactants. Multiple relative permeability and capillary pressure curves
corresponding to different wetting states are used to model the wettability
alteration. Simulations are performed to better understand and predict enhanced
oil recovery as a function of wettability alteration, and to investigate the
impact of uncertainties in the fracture and matrix properties, reservoir
heterogeneity, matrix diffusion, buoyancy-driven flow, initial water
saturation, and formation wettability. The proposed wettability-alteration
model and its implementation were successfully validated against laboratory
experiments. Upscaled simulations indicated the importance of matrix properties
on the rate of imbibition. The oil recovery increases with an increase in
matrix permeability and a decrease in matrix initial water saturation.
© 2009. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
20 February 2006
- Meeting paper published:
22 April 2006
- Revised manuscript received:
1 September 2008
- Manuscript approved:
3 September 2008
- Published online:
1 June 2009
- Version of record:
1 June 2009