SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 12,
Number 4,
August 2009,
518-527
Summary
Alkaline/surfactant/polymer (ASP) flooding is of increasing interest and
importance because of high oil prices and the need to increase oil production.
The benefits of combining alkali with surfactant are well established. The
alkali has very important benefits such as lowering interfacial tension (IFT)
and reducing adsorption of anionic surfactants that decrease costs and make ASP
a very attractive enhanced-oil-recovery method, provided that the consumption
is not too large and the alkali can be propagated at the same rate as the
synthetic surfactant and polymer. However, the process is complex, so it is
important that new candidates for ASP be selected taking into account the
numerous chemical reactions that occur in the reservoir. The reaction of acid
and alkali to generate soap and its subsequent effect on phase behavior is the
most crucial for crude oils containing naphthenic acids. Mechanistic simulation
of the ASP flood considering the chemical reactions, alkali consumption, and
soap generation and the effect on the phase behavior is the key to success of
future field operations. Using numerical models, the process can be designed
and optimized to ensure the proper propagation of alkali and effective soap and
surfactant concentrations to promote low IFT and a favorable salinity gradient.
In this paper, we describe the ASP module of the UTCHEM simulator, which is the
University of Texas chemical compositional simulator, with particular attention
to phase behavior and the effect of soap on optimum salinity and solubilization
ratio. Phase behavior data are presented for sodium carbonate and a blend of
surfactants with an acidic crude oil that followed the conventional Winsor
phase transition with significant three-phase regions even at low surfactant
concentrations. The solubilization data at different oil concentrations were
successfully modeled using Hand’s rule. Optimum salinity and solubilization
ratio were correlated with soap mole fractions using mixing rules. ASP
coreflood results were successfully modeled taking into account the aqueous
reactions, alkali/rock interactions, and phase behavior of soap and surfactant.
Mechanistic simulations give insights into the propagation of alkali, soap, and
surfactant in the core and aid in future coreflood and field-scale ASP
designs.
© 2009. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
600 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
18 February 2008
- Meeting paper published:
20 April 2008
- Revised manuscript received:
13 November 2008
- Manuscript approved:
14 November 2008
- Published online:
31 July 2009
- Version of record:
9 September 2009