Summary
This paper describes the design procedures that led to favorable incremental
oil production and reduced water production during 12 years of successful
polymer flooding in the Daqing oil field. Special emphasis is placed on some
new design factors that were found to be important on the basis of extensive
experience with polymer flooding. These factors include (1) recognizing when
profile modification is needed before polymer injection and when zone isolation
is of value during polymer injection, (2) establishing the optimum polymer
formulations and injection rates, and (3) time-dependent variation of the
molecular weight of the polymer used in the injected slugs.
For some Daqing wells, oil recovery can be enhanced by 2 to 4% of original
oil in place (OOIP) with profile modification before polymer injection. For
some Daqing wells with significant permeability differential between layers and
no crossflow, injecting polymer solutions separately into different layers
improved flow profiles, reservoir sweep efficiency, and injection rates, and it
reduced the water cut in production wells. Experience over time revealed that
larger polymer-bank sizes are preferred. Bank sizes grew from 240–380 mg/L·PV
during the initial pilots to 640 to 700 mg/L·PV in the most recent large-scale
industrial sites [pore volume (PV)]. Economics and injectivity behavior can
favor changing the polymer molecular weight and polymer concentration during
the course of injecting the polymer slug. Polymers with molecular weights from
12 to 35 million Daltons were designed and supplied to meet the requirements
for different reservoir geological conditions. The optimum polymer-injection
volume varied around 0.7 PV, depending on the water cut in the different
flooding units. The average polymer concentration was designed approximately
1000 mg/L, but for an individual injection station, it could be 2000 mg/L or
more. At Daqing, the injection rates should be less than 0.14–0.20 PV/year,
depending on well spacing.
Introduction
Many elements have long been recognized as important during the design of a
polymer flood (Li and Niu 2002; Jewett and Schurz 1970; Sorbie 1991; Vela et
al. 1976; Taber et al. 1997; Maitin 1992; Koning et al. 1988; Wang et al. 1995;
Wang and Qian 2002; Wang et al. 2008). This paper spells out some of those
elements, using examples from the Daqing oil field. The Daqing oil field is
located in northeast China and is a large river-delta/lacustrine-facies,
multilayer, heterogeneous sandstone in an inland basin. The reservoir is buried
at a depth of approximately 1000 m, with a temperature of 45°C. The main
formation under polymer flood (i.e., the Saertu formation) has a net thickness
ranging from from 2.3 to 11.6 m with an average of 6.1 m. The average air
permeability is 1.1 µm2, and the Dykstra-Parsons permeability
coefficient averages 0.7. Oil viscosity at reservoir temperature averages
approximately 9 mPa·s, and the total salinity of the formation water varies
from 3000 to 7000 mg/L. The field was discovered in 1959, and a waterflood was
initiated in 1960. The world’s largest polymer flood was implemented at Daqing,
beginning in December 1995. By 2007, 22.3% of total production from the Daqing
oil field was attributed to polymer flooding. Polymer flooding should boost the
ultimate recovery for the field to more than 50% OOIP--10 to 12% OOIP more than
from waterflooding. At the end of 2007, oil production from polymer flooding at
the Daqing oil field was more than 11.6 million m3 (73 million bbl)
per year (sustained for 6 years). The polymers used at Daqing are
high-molecular-weight partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamides (HPAMs).
During design of a polymer flood, critical reservoir factors that
traditionally receive consideration are the reservoir lithology, stratigraphy,
important heterogeneities (such as fractures), distribution of remaining oil,
well pattern, and well distance. Critical polymer properties include
cost-effectiveness (e.g., cost per unit of viscosity), resistance to
degradation (mechanical or shear, oxidative, thermal, microbial), tolerance of
reservoir salinity and hardness, retention by rock, inaccessible pore volume,
permeability dependence of performance, rheology, and compatibility with other
chemicals that might be used. Issues long recognized as important for
polymer-bank design include bank size (volume), polymer concentration and
salinity (affecting bank viscosity and mobility), and whether (and how) to
grade polymer concentrations in the chase water.
This paper describes the design procedures that led to favorable incremental
oil production and reduced water production during 12 years of successful
polymer flooding in the Daqing oil field.
© 2008. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
30 July 2007
- Meeting paper published:
11 November 2007
- Revised manuscript received:
27 March 2008
- Manuscript approved:
14 April 2008
- Version of record:
29 December 2008