SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 4,
December 2012,
pp. 1231-1245
Summary
Creation of low-mobility foam for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) is triggered
by an increase in superficial velocity; thereafter, injection rate can be
reduced to lower values, and strong foam remains at velocities at which weak
foam was previously observed. Here, we consider whether strong foam created
near an injection well can propagate to large distances from the well where
superficial velocity is much smaller. We study strong-foam propagation with
finite-difference simulations and Riemann solutions, applying a
population-balance foam model that represents the multiple steady states of
foam.
Our simulations show that strong foam cannot displace directly the initial
high-water-saturation bank initially in the reservoir at low superficial
velocities; it pushes a weak-foam state with lower velocity that in turn
displaces the bank ahead. Our traveling-wave solutions show that strong foam
propagates more slowly as superficial velocity decreases and stops propagating
at yet lower superficial velocities, in agreement with the experiment. Failure
of propagation occurs at superficial velocities greater than that at which the
strong-foam state disappears; it raises concerns for long-distance propagation
of strong foam created near the injection well. In the context of the model, it
is not extraordinary destruction of foam at the front that slows the
propagation of strong foam, but failure of foam (re-)generation at the front.
Our model also represents for the first time a process where strong foam is
created near the exit of a core and then propagates upstream, as seen in some
experiments.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
2,522 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
23 November 2011
- Meeting paper published:
14 April 2012
- Revised manuscript received:
14 May 2012
- Manuscript approved:
11 June 2012
- Published online:
5 December 2012
- Version of record:
6 December 2012