Evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions

Foam-Assisted Surfactant Flooding (FASF) is a novel enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method combining the reduction of oil-water (o/w) interfacial tension (IFT) to ultra-low values and foaming of a gas drive for mobility control. We present a detailed laboratory study on the FASF process at reservoir con...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Janssen, M., Mutawa, A., Pilus, R., Zitha, P.
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Published: Society of Petroleum Engineers 2019
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85088069443&doi=10.2118%2f195481-ms&partnerID=40&md5=a0e8302cd1af5987bc72892dd84e9a6d
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/30201/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Teknologi Petronas
id my.utp.eprints.30201
record_format eprints
spelling my.utp.eprints.302012022-03-25T06:37:57Z Evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions Janssen, M. Mutawa, A. Pilus, R. Zitha, P. Foam-Assisted Surfactant Flooding (FASF) is a novel enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method combining the reduction of oil-water (o/w) interfacial tension (IFT) to ultra-low values and foaming of a gas drive for mobility control. We present a detailed laboratory study on the FASF process at reservoir conditions. The stability of two specially selected surfactants in the vicinity of original injection water, i.e. sea water, at 90°C was assessed. The phase behaviour of the crude oil-surfactant-brine systems and the ability of the two selected surfactants to generate stable foam in bulk were studied in presence and in absence of crude oil. The phase behaviour and bulk tests resulted in the formulations of the surfactant slug and drive solutions. The slug solution aims for oil mobilisation by lowering of the o/w IFT and the drive formulation is required for gas foaming for mobility control. CT scanned core-flood experiments were conducted in Bentheimer sandstone cores initially brought to residual oil by water flooding. Oil mobilisation was obtained by injecting a surfactant slug at either under-optimum (o/w IFT of 10-2 mN/m) or optimum (o/w IFT of 10-3 mN/m) salinity conditions. At both salinities the injected surfactant slug yielded the formation of an unstable oil bank due to dominant gravitational forces. Optimum salinity surfactant slug was notably more effective at reducing residual oil to waterflood (81 reduction) compared to the under-optimum salinity slug (30 reduction). After oil mobilisation, drive foam was either generated in-situ by co-injection with nitrogen gas or was pre-generated ex-situ and then injected to displace mobilised oil. It was found that, at optimum salinity, FASF yielded an ultimate recovery factor of 40±5 of the oil in place (OIP) after water flooding whereas under-optimum salinity FASF showed a recovery of 35±7 of OIP after water flooding. Experiments have shown that the presence of crude oil is detrimental to in-situ foam generation and stability. Pre-generated drive foam increased its ultimate oil recovery by 13 of the OIP after water flooding compared to in-situ foam generation at optimum salinity. Copyright 2019, Society of Petroleum Engineers. Society of Petroleum Engineers 2019 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85088069443&doi=10.2118%2f195481-ms&partnerID=40&md5=a0e8302cd1af5987bc72892dd84e9a6d Janssen, M. and Mutawa, A. and Pilus, R. and Zitha, P. (2019) Evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions. In: UNSPECIFIED. http://eprints.utp.edu.my/30201/
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
building UTP Resource Centre
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Petronas
content_source UTP Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utp.edu.my/
description Foam-Assisted Surfactant Flooding (FASF) is a novel enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method combining the reduction of oil-water (o/w) interfacial tension (IFT) to ultra-low values and foaming of a gas drive for mobility control. We present a detailed laboratory study on the FASF process at reservoir conditions. The stability of two specially selected surfactants in the vicinity of original injection water, i.e. sea water, at 90°C was assessed. The phase behaviour of the crude oil-surfactant-brine systems and the ability of the two selected surfactants to generate stable foam in bulk were studied in presence and in absence of crude oil. The phase behaviour and bulk tests resulted in the formulations of the surfactant slug and drive solutions. The slug solution aims for oil mobilisation by lowering of the o/w IFT and the drive formulation is required for gas foaming for mobility control. CT scanned core-flood experiments were conducted in Bentheimer sandstone cores initially brought to residual oil by water flooding. Oil mobilisation was obtained by injecting a surfactant slug at either under-optimum (o/w IFT of 10-2 mN/m) or optimum (o/w IFT of 10-3 mN/m) salinity conditions. At both salinities the injected surfactant slug yielded the formation of an unstable oil bank due to dominant gravitational forces. Optimum salinity surfactant slug was notably more effective at reducing residual oil to waterflood (81 reduction) compared to the under-optimum salinity slug (30 reduction). After oil mobilisation, drive foam was either generated in-situ by co-injection with nitrogen gas or was pre-generated ex-situ and then injected to displace mobilised oil. It was found that, at optimum salinity, FASF yielded an ultimate recovery factor of 40±5 of the oil in place (OIP) after water flooding whereas under-optimum salinity FASF showed a recovery of 35±7 of OIP after water flooding. Experiments have shown that the presence of crude oil is detrimental to in-situ foam generation and stability. Pre-generated drive foam increased its ultimate oil recovery by 13 of the OIP after water flooding compared to in-situ foam generation at optimum salinity. Copyright 2019, Society of Petroleum Engineers.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Janssen, M.
Mutawa, A.
Pilus, R.
Zitha, P.
spellingShingle Janssen, M.
Mutawa, A.
Pilus, R.
Zitha, P.
Evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions
author_facet Janssen, M.
Mutawa, A.
Pilus, R.
Zitha, P.
author_sort Janssen, M.
title Evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions
title_short Evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions
title_full Evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions
title_fullStr Evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions
title_sort evaluation of foam-assisted surfactant flooding at reservoir conditions
publisher Society of Petroleum Engineers
publishDate 2019
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85088069443&doi=10.2118%2f195481-ms&partnerID=40&md5=a0e8302cd1af5987bc72892dd84e9a6d
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/30201/
_version_ 1738657074265456640