Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology
Volume 49,
Number 6,
June 2010,
pp. 46-52
Summary
The formation and flow of emulsions during alkaline flooding process plays
an important role for improving heavy oil recovery. In this study
alkaline/surfactant (A/S) flood tests were performed in sandpacks to
demonstrate the effectiveness of sweep efficiency improvement by the in-situ
generated oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion. High tertiary oil recoveries were
obtained in sandpack flood tests. Experimental results were history matched by
including the mechanisms of in-situ generation and flow of O/W emulsion, as
well as the chemical adsorption and the reduction of interfacial tension
involved in the chemical flooding process. The decrease in local water phase
permeability caused by the entrapment of emulsion droplets was modelled using
the filtration theory. Both the pressure response and the oil recovery
improvement were fairly matched. Field-scale simulations were conducted to
investigate the potential of A/S flooding for heavy oil reservoirs. Simulations
showed promising results of chemical flooding for heavy oils. It was indicated
that a certain length of waterflooding time would benefit the final oil
recovery, and there existed an optimum chemical slug size. These laboratory
results and the simulation technique are helpful in the simulation and design
of field-scale projects of chemical flooding for enhanced heavy oil
recovery.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
3,714 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
26 April 2009
- Meeting paper published:
17 June 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
19 April 2010
- Manuscript approved:
12 May 2010
- Published online:
21 June 2010
- Version of record:
1 June 2010