Influencing Factors of Surfactant Stripping Crude Oil and Spontaneous Imbibition Mechanism of Surfactants in a Tight Reservoir

被引:24
作者
Cao, Guangsheng [1 ]
Cheng, Qingchao [1 ]
Liu, Ying [1 ]
Bu, Ruixuan [2 ]
Zhang, Ning [1 ]
Wang, Peilun [3 ]
机构
[1] Northeast Petr Univ, Minist Educ, Key Lab Enhanced Oil & Gas Recovery, Daqing 163318, Peoples R China
[2] Daqing Oilfield Co Ltd, Oil Prod Plant 2, Daqing 163000, Peoples R China
[3] Zhejiang Univ, Ctr Chem Frontier Technol, Hangzhou 310028, Zhejiang, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
WATER BLOCKING; WET; SHALE; IFT;
D O I
10.1021/acsomega.2c02190
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Surfactants play a vital role in the working fluid during the exploitation of tight reservoirs. The main goal is to clarify the mechanism of surfactant production enhancement in the reservoir. In this paper, starting from the interface properties and emulsifying properties of surfactants, the factors affecting the stripping of crude oil by different surfactants were described in detail. Meanwhile, the imbibition experiments of cores were used to clarify the two spontaneous imbibition mechanisms of the surfactant. Namely, they are the capillary force expulsion caused by the emulsion stripping thermal diffusion-convection and the wettability change. When the interfacial tension between the surfactant and oil is in the range of 10(-2)-10(-3) mN/m, the particle size of emulsion is less than 1 pm, and the oil stripping efficiency is greater than 58%. The imbibition is mainly caused by thermal diffusion-convection. The wetting angle of the surfactant mainly changing wettability is less than 1 mu m, and the adhesion work is greater than 52 mN/m. Using X-ray computed tomography, the surfactant imbibition distance of different permeability types of cores was obtained. The results show that higher permeability cores have a deeper imbibition distance. The results of this paper enrich the mechanism of enhanced oil recovery by surfactants and have important implications for the exploitation of tight reservoirs.
引用
收藏
页码:19010 / 19020
页数:11
相关论文
共 23 条
[1]   The effect of grid generated turbulence on the fluidelastic instability response in parallel triangular tube array [J].
Akram, Muhammad Ammar ;
Khushnood, Shahab ;
Tariq, Syeda Laraib ;
Nizam, Luqman Ahmad ;
Ali, Hafiz Muhammad .
ANNALS OF NUCLEAR ENERGY, 2021, 158
[2]   Flow regimes during surfactant flooding: The influence of phase behaviour [J].
Alzahid, Yara A. ;
Mostaghimi, Peyman ;
Walsh, Stuart D. C. ;
Armstrong, Ryan T. .
FUEL, 2019, 236 :851-860
[3]   Spontaneous Imbibition of Surfactant Solution into an Oil-Wet Capillary: Wettability Restoration by Surfactant-Contaminant Complexation [J].
Hammond, Paul S. ;
Unsal, Evren .
LANGMUIR, 2011, 27 (08) :4412-4429
[4]   Recent Advances in Surfactant EOR [J].
Hirasaki, George J. ;
Miller, Clarence A. ;
Puerto, Maura .
SPE JOURNAL, 2011, 16 (04) :889-907
[5]   Analysis of Microscopic Displacement Mechanisms of Dilute Surfactant Flooding in Oil-wet and Water-wet Porous Media [J].
Jamaloei, Benyamin Yadali ;
Kharrat, Riyaz .
TRANSPORT IN POROUS MEDIA, 2010, 81 (01) :1-19
[6]   Review on Surfactant Flooding: Phase Behavior, Retention, IFT, and Field Applications [J].
Kamal, Muhammad Shahzad ;
Hussein, Ibnelwaleed A. ;
Sultan, Abdullah S. .
ENERGY & FUELS, 2017, 31 (08) :7701-7720
[7]   Evaluation of wettability alteration and IFT reduction on mitigating water blocking for low-permeability oil-wet rocks after hydraulic fracturing [J].
Liang, Tianbo ;
Zhou, Fujian ;
Lu, Jun .
FUEL, 2017, 209 :650-660
[8]   Flow physics of how surfactants can reduce water blocking caused by hydraulic fracturing in low permeability reservoirs [J].
Liang, Tianbo ;
Achour, Sofiane H. ;
Longoria, Rafael A. ;
DiCarlo, David A. ;
Nguyen, Quoc P. .
JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2017, 157 :631-642
[9]  
Liu JR, 2019, J IND ENG CHEM, V72, P414
[10]   Study of Nanoparticle-Surfactant-Stabilized Foam as a Fracturing Fluid [J].
Lv, Qichao ;
Li, Zhaomin ;
Li, Binfei ;
Li, Songyan ;
Sun, Qian .
INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY RESEARCH, 2015, 54 (38) :9468-9477