SPE Journal
Volume 16,
Number 3,
September 2011,
pp. 662-671
Summary
In this study, a silica-templated synthesis route was adopted for
fabrication of zinc phosphonate nanomaterials to expand their use in the
delivery of phosphonate inhibitors into crushed formation materials for scale
control. Transition divalent metal Zn2+ was chosen because of its
ability to significantly increase inhibitor retention and effectiveness. Zinc
chloride was first adsorbed onto the surface of 22-nm silica particles,
followed by gradual addition of diethylenetriaminepentakis (methylenephosphonic
acid) (DTPMP) to form nanometer-sized particles in the presence of sodium
dodecylbenzene sulfonate (SDBS) surfactant. The physical and chemical
properties of the synthesized Si-Zn-DTPMP nanomaterial suspension (nanofluid)
have been carefully evaluated. The nanofluid was stable at 70°C in 1% KCl at pH
6.7 for over 12 hours. The transport of the synthesized nanofluid through
columns of crushed calcite and sandstone has been investigated using column
breakthrough experiments and modeled with a 1D advection-dispersion equation.
The nanofluid was transportable through these media, and near-total
breakthrough could be obtained by preflushing the media with an anionic SDBS
surfactant solution. The nanofluid was transformed from an amorphous phase into
a crystalline phase during diafiltration. The crystalline-phase materials
demonstrated a much longer inhibitor lifetime compared with the untreated ones.
The long-term flowback performance of the crystalline nanofluid was examined
with a laboratory squeeze-simulation test where the nanomaterials gradually
returned phosphonate inhibitors in the flowback brine solution, and the
normalized return volume was greater than the previously reported nanomaterials
squeeze treatments.
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
19 March 2010
- Meeting paper published:
27 May 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
12 January 2011
- Manuscript approved:
19 January 2011
- Published online:
16 June 2011
- Version of record:
15 September 2011