SPE Journal
Volume 18,
Number 2,
April 2013,
pp. 214-218
Summary
A theoretical surface coordination model of oil attraction to
sandstone-reservoir surfaces confirms the two primary oil/mineral coordination
reactions to be electrostatic linking of anionic kaolinite-edge sites to
protonated nitrogen bases at pH < 6 and calcium carboxylate groups at pH
> 6. Kaolinite basal planes are calculated to link to oil through oil
-NH+ groups at pH < 6-7 and through oil -COOCa+
groups at pH > 6-7, and may be important to oil attraction where basal
planes are more exposed than edges (the ranges shift, depending on the oil,
acid, and base numbers). Model predictions are most sensitive to the
dissociation constant of oil surface carboxylate groups but are relatively
insensitive to other surface equilibria and temperature. The model shows that,
although low-salinity, low-Ca waterfloods can enhance oil recovery by
decreasing the number of Ca2+ bridges and anionic kaolinite-edge
sites, dissolution of sandstone carbonate minerals dampens the low-salinity
effect by buffering decreases in waterflood Ca2+ levels. Better
model predictions require more-accurate predictions of Ca2+ levels
during waterflooding, high-temperature sulfateadsorption analyses, and
more-precise measurements of oil acidity and basicity.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
21 October 2011
- Manuscript approved:
6 July 2012
- Published online:
17 December 2012
- Version of record:
5 April 2013