Chemical EOR
Chemical EOR
Chemical EOR
1
For
more
informa<on
about
Chemical
EOR
research
at
CPGE,
please
visit:
hGp://cpge.utexas.edu/?q=IAP_ChemicalEOR
Research
sponsors
include:
2
Gary
Pope
Center
for
Petroleum
and
Geosystems
Engineering
University
of
Texas
at
Aus<n
3
3
Chemical
EOR
• Polymer
flooding
(PF)
• Surfactant-‐polymer
(SP)
flooding
• Alkali-‐surfactant-‐polymer
(ASP)
flooding
• Alkali-‐co-‐solvent-‐polymer
(ACP)
flooding
• Low
tension
gas
flooding
(LTG)
• Chemicals
combined
with
hea<ng
• Surfactant
enhanced
imbibi<on
• Polymer
gels
for
blocking
or
diver<ng
flow
• Polymers
combined
with
low
salinity
4
Why
Chemical
EOR?
• Chemical
EOR
is
evolving
and
ge[ng
beGer
with
<me
due
to
innova<ons
and
experience
• The
cost
of
chemicals
has
decreased
by
a
factor
of
two
rela<ve
to
the
price
of
crude
oil
while
at
the
same
<me
the
quality
of
the
chemicals
has
improved
• Hybrid
processes
have
been
developed
and
con<nue
to
improve:
– Low
tension
gas
flooding
– Surfactants
combined
with
heat
– Polymers
combined
with
smart
water
– Gravity
stable
surfactant
floods
5
Where
to
Use
It
• Favorable
geology
as
indicated
by
good
water
flood
performance,
interwell
tracers,
single
well
tracers,….
• High
porosity
and
permeability
• Oil
viscosity
– Up
to
10,000
cp
for
PF/ACP
– Up
to
200
cp
for
SP/ASP
– Even
higher
oil
viscosity
when
combined
with
hea<ng
(hot
water,
electrical
hea<ng)
• Reservoir
temperatures
up
to
250
°F
• Reservoir
salini<es
up
to
250,000
ppm
TDS
6
EOR
Screening
Criteria
CO2/ NGL/ N2 Steam Low Tension
Property WAG WAG Drive SAGD Polymer SP/ASP ACP Gas
Oil API >22 >40 >8 >6 >12 >12 12-25 >20
Oil Visc., cp <10 <10 100-10,000 1000-106 <10,000 <200 20-1000 <20
Perm. (k), md >1 >1 >250 >5000 >10 >10 >10 >1
Porosity >10 >10 >30 >30 >10 >15 >15 >10
φhSo, ft >1 >1 >10 >10 >1 >5 >1 >1
Pressure, psia >MMP >MMP <1000 <1000 -- -- -- --
kh, md-ft >100 >100 >50000 >105 >1000 >1000 >1000
ROS, % >20 >20 >40 >40 >30 >20 >20 >20
Net pay, ft >10 >10 >50 >100 >10 >10 >10 >10
Salinity, ppm -- -- -- -- <250000 <250000 <250000 <250000
7
Polymer
Flooding
The
primary
objec;ve
of
polymer
flooding
is
to
provide
beHer
displacement
and
volumetric
sweep
efficiencies
during
a
waterflood
8
Example
of
Lower
Remaining
Oil
SaturaKon
of
Polymerflood
Compared
to
Waterflood
Waterflood 100%
vi = 13 ft/day
90%
µw = 0.48 cp So - Polymer
µo = 80 cp 80%
Soi = 0.87
70% So - Water
Oil Saturation (%)
Sor = 0.38
60%
50%
Polymer flood
40%
vi = 1.0 ft/day
µp = 17 cp 30%
Soi = 0.85
Sor = 0.26 20%
10%
ΔSor = -0.12
0%
0.00 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00
Pore Volumes
9
Polymer
Flooding
Advances
• Quality
of
commercial
hydrolyzed
polyacrylamide
(HPAM)
polymers
is
much
beGer
resul<ng
in
high
injec<vity
in
both
ver<cal
and
horizontal
wells
• HPAM
polymers
are
available
with
molecular
weights
up
to
at
least
20
million
• Equipment
and
procedures
for
field
prepara<on
of
high
quality
polymer
solu<ons
are
now
rou<ne
• Water
sojening
is
now
inexpensive
(as
low
as
US$
0.15
per
Bbl
of
seawater
when
done
on
a
large
scale)
and
enables
the
use
of
HPAM
even
at
high
temperature
• New
polymers
can
be
used
in
hard
brine
at
high
temperature
10
Polymer
Flooding
• Increasing
water
viscosity
by
adding
polymer
to
the
water
helps
minimize
the
adverse
effects
of
reservoir
heterogeneity
and
will
benefit
almost
all
water
floods
even
if
the
oil
viscosity
is
low
• The
benefits
are
greatest
when
polymer
is
injected
at
high
concentra<on
for
a
long
<me
e.g.
more
than
one
pore
volume
• Under
favorable
condi<ons,
the
polymer
cost
is
in
the
range
of
$1
to
$5
per
Bbl
of
addi<onal
oil
11
Surfactant
Methods
• The
main
objec<ve
of
SP/ASP/ACP
flooding
is
to
recover
the
oil
remaining
ajer
water
flooding
by
mobilizing
oil
trapped
in
pores
due
to
capillary
forces
(residual
oil
satura<on)
• The
interfacial
tension
between
the
oil
and
water
must
be
reduced
by
about
10,000
fold
to
mobilize
all
of
the
trapped
oil
in
the
swept
zone
• Adding
a
high
molecular
weight
polymer
to
the
surfactant
solu<on
to
increase
its
viscosity
vastly
improves
the
oil
recovery
12
Example
Oil
Recovery
of
100
cp
Oil
from
Core
30%
PV
ASP
Slug
(0.3%
surfactant);
Surfactant
reten<on=0.02
mg/g
100%
Curves: UTCHEM
Points: Experiment Cumulative Oil Recovered
Oil Cut or Cumulative Oil Recovered
80%
ASP slug diluted with polymer drive
40%
20%
0%
0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0
13
Pore Volumes
New
Surfactants
and
Co-‐solvents
• Several
new
classes
of
high-‐performance
surfactants
and
co-‐solvents
have
been
developed
in
recent
years
•
Wide
range
of
molecular
weights
up
to
4000
• Include
inexpensive
ethylene
oxide
and
propylene
oxide
to
improve
salinity
and
hardness
tolerance
• Carboxylates
and
sulfonates
stable
up
to
250
°F
• Made
from
commercial
feedstocks
• Use
synergis<c
mixtures
14
• Cost
about
$2.50/lb
of
ac<ve
surfactant
Low
Surfactant
RetenKon
• The
amount
of
surfactant
needed
to
recover
oil
is
directly
propor<onal
to
surfactant
reten<on
so
lowering
the
surfactant
reten<on
is
the
key
to
low
chemical
cost
per
Bbl
of
addi<onal
oil
• Surfactant
reten<on
is
caused
by
adsorp<on
on
the
rock
and
phase
trapping
of
viscous
emulsions
• Phase
trapping
is
ojen
the
largest
contribu<on
to
surfactant
reten<on
• Lower
emulsion
viscosity
results
in
lower
surfactant
reten<on
15
Low
Surfactant
RetenKon
• Surfactant
reten<on
has
been
reduced
by
a
factor
of
about
3
in
recent
years
• Alkali
reduces
surfactant
reten<on
a
factor
of
about
2
• Surfactant
reten<on
in
sandstones
with
high
clay
content
has
been
reduced
to
values
in
the
range
of
0.02
to
0.11
mg/g
rock
and
similar
values
have
been
measured
in
carbonate
cores
• Good
mobility
control
is
essen<al
to
get
such
low
reten<on
16
ConvenKonal
Co-‐solvent
• 30%
oil;
µo=~5.5
cP
@
25°C
• 0.5%
TDA-‐13PO-‐SO4-‐,
0.5%
C20-‐24
IOS
• 0%
&
2%
IBA
17
New
Co-‐solvent
• 50%
oil;
µo=2.9
cP
@
55°C
• 0.6%OA-‐45PO-‐10EO-‐SO4-‐,
0.4%
C15-‐17
ABS
• 1%
phenol-‐4EO
18
Surfactant
Reten<on
=
0.075
mg/g
rock
Sandstone
with
11.9
wt%
clay,
µME/µo
=
1.9
0.3 PV Polymer Drive
ASP
100% 5000
Cumulative Oil Recovered /Oil Cut/Sorc (%)
60% 3000
2500
40% 2000
1500
20% 1000
500
0% 0
0.00 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00
19
Pore Volumes
Surfactant
Reten<on=0.11
mg/g
rock
Sandstone
with
11.9
wt%
clay,
µME/µo=2.2
Surfactant Concentration
60% 60%
50%
40% 40%
30%
20% 20%
10%
0% 0%
0.00 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00
20
Pore Volumes
Economic
Significance
of
Reduced
RetenKon
Surfactant Retention Surfactant Concentration Surfactant Cost
(mg/g rock) (wt%) ($/BBL Produced Oil)
0.40 (1993) 1.78% 18.21
0.20 (2008) 0.88% 9.11
0.08 (2015) 0.36% 3.64
References
• Wang
(1993),
Flaaten
(2008)
Assump<ons
• Porosity:
20%
• Recovery
Factor:
25%
OOIP
• Size
of
Chemical
Slug:
0.3
PV
• Surfactant
to
Co-‐solvent
Ra<o:
1
• Surfactant:
$2.00
/
lb
21
Live
Oil
Coreflood
using
new
TSP
Surfactant
(Oil
Cut
in
ASP
Field
Pilot
Nearly
the
Same
as
Coreflood)
100% 45%
97.4% 40%
Cum Oil Recovered (%), Oil cut (%)
PD II
80%
35%
PD I
ASP 30%
20%
40%
15%
Cum Oil
Recovery 10%
20% Oil Cut
So
5%
1.01%
0% 0%
0.00 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00
Pore Volumes
22
Take
Home
• The
combined
impact
of
all
of
the
new
Chemical
EOR
and
oilfield
technology
is
a
game
changer
– New
and
beGer
chemicals
at
lower
real
cost
– Increased
performance
at
lower
cost
per
Bbl
oil
– New
hybrid
methods
for
both
light
and
heavy
oil
– BeGer
models
are
available
to
design
and
predict
field
performance
– BeGer
enabling
technologies
e.g.
horizontal
wells
• But
it’s
s<ll
complex
technology
and
geology
s<ll
maGers,
and
so
do
people
23
Mojdeh
Delshad
Research
Professor,
Center
for
Petroleum
and
Geosystems
Engineering,
The
University
of
Texas
at
Aus<n
24
Modeling
Chemical
EOR
Methods
Our
Mission
Since
1977
• Mechanis<c
modeling
of
CEOR
processes
from
bench
to
pilot
to
field
scales
• Modeling
geochemical
reac<ons
for
more
challenging
fluid
and
reservoir
condi<ons
– Hard
brine
with
EDTA,
soj
brine
with
sodium
carbonate
– Carbonate
reservoirs
– Low
salinity
waterflood
• Modeling
hybrid
methods
– WeGability
modifica<on
(surf.
in
fractured
carbonates)
– Low
salinity
or
smart
water
(low
salinity/
polymer)
– Hot
water
(hot
SP)
– Foam
(surf/foam)
– Gas
(low
tension
gas)
25
25
UTCHEM
ApplicaKons
§ Tracer
tests
(single
well,
interwell)
§ Low
salinity
waterflood
§ Polymer
flooding
§ Microbial
EOR
§ Viscoelas<c
polymer
§ Biological
reac<ve
simula<ons
§
Polymer
degrada<on
mechanisms
§ Injec<vity
correc<on
• Hot
surfactant/polymer
flood
for
heavy
oil
§ Surfactant/polymer
flooding
• Steam
• Electrical
hea<ng
§ Alkaline/surfactant/polymer
flooding
• Hot
water
§ Geochemical
reac<ve
simula<ons
• Low
tension
gas
flooding
(SAG,
ASG)
§ Polymer/crosslinker
(gel)
for
profile
• Foam
op<ons
modifica<on
• Black
oil
op<on
§ WeGability
altera<on
with
surfactants
26
26
Chemical
EOR
Methods
for
Heavy
Oils
27
27
Polymer
Flooding
of
Offshore
Viscous
Oil
with
Strong
Aquifer
Support
28
28
InjecKon
Well
LocaKon
OpKmizaKon
Producer
Inj. well
WOC
29
29
Oil
Viscosity
and
Injector
LocaKon
300 cp oil
1520 cp oil
30
30
Alkaline
-‐
CoSolvent
-‐
Polymer
(ACP)
New
Technology
q Addition of co-solvent to AP leads to ACP
q Low IFT & mobility control without synthetic surfactant
q Breaks viscous and unstable emulsions
q Effective only with oils that form soaps (active oil)
31
31
ACP
Lab
Coreflood
Recoveries
• Oil
viscosity
from
70
to
4800
cp
• TerKary
oil
recoveries
from
80
to
95%
OOIP
2
32
ACP
Pilot
Project
ü 0.5
PV
polymer
preflush
ü 0.11
PV
ACP
slug
ü 1
PV
polymer
33
33
Improve
Displacement
Efficiency
using
ViscoelasKc
Polymers
34
34
Residual
Oil
SaturaKon
vs.
Deborah
Number
h
• S
or
:
residual
oil
satura<on
at
high
NDe
l h
h ( S or − S or )
Sor = Sor + • S
l
:
residual
oil
satura<on
at
low
NDe
1 + TPP × N De or
• TPP
:
fi[ng
parameter
0.4
0.3
0.2
Sor
0.1
0
0.0001 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000
NDe
35
35
Sandpack
Experiment
with
250
cp
Oil
100% 1
90% 0.9
80% 0.8
Cum Oil Recovered (%)
Water Flood
70% Oil saturation 0.7
60% 0.6
50% 0.5
40% 0.4
30% Cum. Oil 0.3
20% Oil Cut 0.2
10% 0.1
0% 0
0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5
Pore Volumes
100% 100%
90% 90%
Cum Oil Recovered (%)
80% 80%
37
37
InjecKvity
CorrecKon
Models
• Results
are
very
close
to
radial
simula<ons.
No correction
Analytical
Skin = -2.86
Radial
38
38
Modeling
Unstable
Polymer
Floods
t
=
0.30
PV
So
• IFT reduction
Surfactant-1 • Wettability alteration
40
19
SimulaKon
of
SAG
Coreflood
Parameters
Maximum resistance factor, RFmax 75
Critical oil saturation, So* 0.3 (vol/vol)
Critical surfactant concentration, C s 0.00085 (vol/vol)
Gas shear thinning exponent, σ 1.0
Water saturation tolerance, ε 0.01
Reference gas velocity, ug ,Ref 1.65 (ft/Day)
Low trapping rel. High trapping rel. Foam properties
perm properties are perm properties are are dominated
Water saturation at critical capillary pressure, Sw*
dominated
0.25 (vol/vol)
dominated
41
41
Gravity-‐Stable
Surfactant
(SGS)
Floods
• No need for mobility control with either polymers or
high pressure gas to reduce cost, complexity and
uncertainty
• Using horizontal wells gives higher volumetric
sweep efficiency and maximum critical velocity
compared to vertical wells.
• Practical if there are no barriers to vertical flow and
the vertical permeability is high.
• Some of the world’s largest oil reservoirs are high-
temperature, moderate-permeability, light-oil
reservoirs and thus good candidates.
42
42
SGS
Coreflood
in
Fractured
Carbonates
Surfactant
flood Water
flood Surfactant
flood Water
flood
60
LAB
50
Recovery
(%OOIP)
40
Model
30
20
10
SGS Experiment
0
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8
PV
43
43
SimulaKon
of
SGS
Experiment
Permeability Distribution Oil Saturation at 1.75 PV Surfactant Conc. at 1.75 PV
Production
45
45
Recent
Chemical
EOR
Field
Projects
46
46
ASP
Pilot
in
Mangala
Field
in
India
Comments?
cpge@utexas.edu
*CEU
verifica;on
is
no
longer
available
for
this
webinar.
50