Summary
Alkaline flooding has been purported to be a promising process for enhancing
heavy-oil recovery, while alkaline/polymer (AP) and alkaline/surfactant/polymer
(ASP) injection represent commercial flooding strategies for lighter oils. The
alkali in an ASP flood can reduce adsorption of surfactants and react with
acids in the oil to form soaps. Polymers increase the viscosity of water and
control mobility ratio. The addition of an alkali to a straight polymer flood
can further increase the efficiency in polymer flooding. The alkali can react
with the rock and polymer to reduce polymer adsorption and decrease
polymer-solution viscosity to allow higher injectivity.
We report results of core experiments for polymer, alkali, and AP tertiary
floods. The conditions tested correspond to Wyoming's Minnelusa sandstone
reservoirs. Berea cores were waterflooded to residual-oil saturation, and then
a tertiary injection of a polymer, alkali, or AP solution was run, followed by
waterflooding. We also show results of polymer-solution viscosity with varying
alkali concentration. Polymer-adsorption results from dynamic and static
experiments with and without alkali are reported. Numerical history match of
coreflooding results was performed using CMG-STARS.
Results show that a tertiary alkali injection produces negligible oil
recovery and pressure-drop increase. Straight polymer injection produces
considerable oil recovery with a significant increase in pressure drop that may
not be favorable for field designs. The injection of the AP solution also
produced considerable oil recovery, but the increase in pressure drop was less
than that of the straight polymer flood. The effects of alkali on polymer and
rock surface lead to a significant impact on recovery factor, resistance
factors, and also residual resistance factors.
Results of this study demonstrate one of the benefits of adding alkalis in
polymer flooding--namely, the improvement in injectivity--in addition to the
known reduction in polymer losses because of adsorption on the rock surface.
The modeling strategy should help with alkali-enhanced polymer-flooding
designs.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
8 February 2011
- Meeting paper published:
12 April 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
10 September 2011
- Manuscript approved:
11 November 2011
- Published online:
23 March 2012
- Version of record:
3 April 2012