SPE Journal
Online First
Summary
A detailed laboratory study of nitrogen-foam propagation in natural
sandstones in the absence of oil is reported. The goal of this study was to
elucidate further the mechanisms of foam mobility control. The C14-16
alpha-olefin sulfonate (AOS) surfactant was selected to stabilize foam. X-ray
computed-tomography (CT) images were taken during foam propagation to map
liquid saturation over time. Effects of surfactant concentration and of total
injection velocity were examined in detail because these are key parameters for
controlling foam strength and foam propagation under field conditions. The
experiments revealed that foam mobility decreases in two steps: During initial
forward foam propagation, foam mobility decreases by an order of magnitude
compared with water mobility; during a secondary backward liquid desaturation,
it decreases further by one to two orders of magnitude for sufficiently high
surfactant concentrations. The steady-state mobility-reduction factor (MRF)
increases considerably with both surfactant concentration and total injection
velocity. A hysteresis was observed for a cycle of increasing/decreasing
surfactant concentration or total injection velocity. The observed effects
could be interpreted mechanistically in terms of surfactant adsorption and foam
rheology. Implications for field application of foam for immiscible and
miscible gas enhanced oil recovery (EOR) are discussed.
© 2013. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
1,031 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
28 September 2011
- Meeting paper published:
15 November 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
2 July 2012
- Manuscript approved:
25 September 2012
- Published online:
8 January 2013