Comparative Study of Polyacrylamide Co-polymers for EOR at High Salinity Conditions “Laboratory and Simulation"

Conference paper


Centeno, M, Diaz, PA and Breda, A (2017). Comparative Study of Polyacrylamide Co-polymers for EOR at High Salinity Conditions “Laboratory and Simulation". IOR 2017 - 19th European Symposium on Improved Oil Recovery. Satavanger 22 - 24 Apr 2017 EAGE. https://doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201700348
AuthorsCenteno, M, Diaz, PA and Breda, A
TypeConference paper
Abstract

Summary: The success of polymer flooding as a method of oil recovery has been attributed to a profile control mechanism of the displacing fluid (polymer solutions) related to the displaced fluid (crude oil), depending on properties such as polymer viscosity and its dependence with reservoir and flow conditions. The viscosity of polymer flow depends not only on the size of the molecules or molecular weight but it is further affected by salinity and divalent content on the brine used for the preparation of the polymer slug. The effect of salinity on polymer viscosity is more critical in presence of divalent ions Ca2+ and Mg2+ and high salinity conditions, which limits the use high salinity produced water for re-injection in polymer flooding processes where high salinity is involved. A series of salinity resistant polymers have been developed by incorporating co-monomers including hydrophilic and hydrophobic groups or combination of them along the chain of polyacrylamide which has made the viscosity behavior more complex and affected by ionic interactions both intra-molecular and inter-molecular. Therefore, an extensively screening process that includes evaluation of variables such as: stability of polymer solutions under salinity and ion composition, flow conditions and sensitivity analysis using simulation according to specific applications, is required for the selection of any specific system. A systematic comparative study of the screening of commercial partial hydrolysed polyacrylamide (PHPA), and co-polymers of acrylamide and hydrophobic modified Comb-polymers (HMPAM) under high salinity conditions is investigated. Synthetic high salinity and multi-component (with divalent ions) produced water from a North Sea reservoir was used on Bernheimer sandstone core samples using a crude oil from the North Sea with specific gravity 21 ºAPI. Results from core flooding and rheology were matched to obtain required mathematical correlations to simulate core flooding experiments numerically and compare the efficiency of the different polymers. While polymers PHPA and co-polymers AM-AMPS and AM-nVP showed typical Newtonian behavior at low shear rates and non- Newtonian at high shear rates, HMPAM polymers have shear thinning behavior. Newtonian behavior on PHPA-3 seems to support its higher recovery factor comparing with PHPA-6 (higher MW). Viscosity of HMPAM solutions is more sensitive to changes of the polymer concentration and more sensible to flow conditions. Additionally, ionic interactions and steric effects in the co-polymers contribute the efficiency of the oil recovery at high salinity. Therefore, their viscosity behavior needs to be evaluated.

Year2017
PublisherEAGE
Journal citation2017, pp. 1-20
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201700348
Accepted author manuscript
License
File Access Level
Open
Publication dates
Print24 Apr 2017
Publication process dates
Deposited08 Jun 2017
Accepted24 Feb 2017
Permalink -

https://openresearch.lsbu.ac.uk/item/86z94

Download files


Accepted author manuscript
Paper_EAGE_2017_Polymer_84.pdf
License: CC BY 4.0
File access level: Open

  • 112
    total views
  • 276
    total downloads
  • 7
    views this month
  • 3
    downloads this month

Export as

Related outputs

Enhanced History Matching Process by Incorporation of Saturation Logs as Model Selection Criteria
Aponte, J.M, Webber, R, Centeno, M., Dhaka, H.N, Sayed, M.H and Malakooti, R (2023). Enhanced History Matching Process by Incorporation of Saturation Logs as Model Selection Criteria. Petroleum Exploration and Development. 50 (2), pp. 398-408. https://doi.org/10.11698/PED.20220442
Should Engineering Students Learn About Human Factors at Universities?
Nazaruc, M, Centeno, M., Bitar, F and Peres, S (2021). Should Engineering Students Learn About Human Factors at Universities? Journal of Petroleum Technology. 5.
Experimental Study of Chemical Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) Methods in Sandstone Core Samples: Effect of Salinity and Divalent Cations.
Centeno, M. (2019). Experimental Study of Chemical Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) Methods in Sandstone Core Samples: Effect of Salinity and Divalent Cations. PhD Thesis London South Bank University School Of Engineering https://doi.org/10.18744/lsbu.8qv7w
Feasibility Study on Offshore Polymer Flooding, Forecasting Production Through Integrated Asset Modelling, A Technical and Economic Approach
Farhadi, A, Primera, A, Aponte, J and Centeno, M (2015). Feasibility Study on Offshore Polymer Flooding, Forecasting Production Through Integrated Asset Modelling, A Technical and Economic Approach. SPE Review London.
Application of Low Concentration Surfactant Enhanced Water-Alternating-Gas Flooding
Sagbana, I, Diaz, PA, Eneotu, M, Centeno, M, Vajihi, F and Farhadi, A (2017). Application of Low Concentration Surfactant Enhanced Water-Alternating-Gas Flooding. IOR 2016 – 19th European Symposium on Improved Oil Recovery. Stavanger, Norway 24 - 27 Apr 2017 EAGE. https://doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201700343
Systematic comparative study of Polyacrylamide Co-polymers for EOR at High Salinity Conditions
Diaz, PA, Centeno, M and Breda, A (2017). Systematic comparative study of Polyacrylamide Co-polymers for EOR at High Salinity Conditions. 19th European Symposium on Improved Oil Recovery. Stavenger, Norway. 24 - 27 Apr 2017