Summary
Molecular simulation is a powerful technique for obtaining thermodynamic
properties of a system of given composition at a specific temperature and
pressure, and it enables us to visualize microscopic phenomena. In this work,
we used simulations to study interfacial phenomena and phase equilibria, which
are important to CO2, N2-enhanced oil recovery (EOR).
We conducted molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of an oil/water interface in
the presence of CO2, N2. It was found that
CO2, N2 was enriched at the interfacial region under all
thermal conditions. Whereas the oil/water interfacial tension (IFT) increases
with pressure, CO2, N2 reduces the IFT by approximately
one-third at low pressure and one-half at higher pressure. Further analysis on
the basis of our MD trajectories shows that the O=C=O bonds to the water with a
"T-shaped" structure, which provides the mechanism for CO2,
N2 enrichment at the oil/water interface. The residual nonnegligible
IFT at high pressures implies that the connate or injected water in a reservoir
strongly influences the transport of CO2, N2/oil solutes
in that reservoir.
We used Gibbs ensemble Monte Carlo (GEMC) simulation to compute phase
equilibria and obtain ternary phase diagrams of such systems as CO2,
N2/n-butane/N2 and CO2, N2/n-butane/n-decane.
Simulating hydrocarbon fluids with a mixture of CO2 and N2 enables us to
evaluate the effects of N2 impurity on CO2, N2 EOR. It
also enables us to study the phase behavior, which is routinely used to
evaluate the minimum miscibility pressure (MMP). We chose these two systems
because experimental data are available for them. Our calculated phase
equilibria are in fair agreement with experiments. We also discuss possible
ways to improve the predictive capability for CO2,
N2/hydrocarbon systems.
GEMC and MD simulations of systems with heavier hydrocarbons are
straightforward and enable us to combine molecularlevel thinking with process
considerations in CO2, N2-EOR.
© 2013. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
15 August 2011
- Meeting paper published:
15 November 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
9 October 2012
- Manuscript approved:
16 October 2012
- Published online:
8 January 2013
- Version of record:
5 April 2013