4.6 Article

Assessment of Polymer-Induced Clogging Using Microfluidics

Journal

SPE JOURNAL
Volume 26, Issue 6, Pages 3793-3804

Publisher

SOC PETROLEUM ENG
DOI: 10.2118/201626-PA

Keywords

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Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Science Technology

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This study used microfluidic techniques to evaluate formation clogging induced by polymer flood, showing that prolonged injection of polymer solutions could clog pore throats larger than the mean polymer-coil size, highlighting limitations in industry polymer screening workflows based solely on molecular size and rock pore-throat size distribution.
Polymers have been successfully deployed in the oil and gas industry in various field implementations, including mobility control in waterflood, flow divergence, and well conformance control. However, lab and field applications of polymer injections often encounter polymer-induced formation damage related to pore-throat clogging from polymer entrapments, leading to permeability reduction. This phenomenon manifests as a loss of injectivity, which can diminish the recovery performance. The polymer interaction mechanisms with porous rocks are not fully understood. In this work, we use microfluidics to assess formation clogging induced by polymer flood. Microfluidic techniques offer convenient tools to observe polymer flow behavior and transport mechanisms through porous media. The microfluidic chips were designed to mimic the pore-size distribution of oil-bearing conventional reservoir rocks, with pore throats ranging from 1 to 101.tm. The proposed fabrication techniques enabled us to transfer the design onto a silicon wafer substrate through photo-lithography. The constructed microfluidic chip, conceptually known as reservoir-on-a-chip, served as a 2D flow proxy. With this technique, we overcome the inherent complexity of the 3D aspects of porous rocks to study the transport mechanisms occurring at the pore scale. We performed various experiments to assess some mechanisms of polymer-rock interaction related to the sizes of the polymer molecules and pore throats. The polymer flow behavior was compared to that of the waterflood baseline. Our observations showed that prolonged injection of polymer solutions could clog pore throats of sizes larger than the measured mean polymer-coil size, which is consistent with lab and field observations. This finding highlights a limitation in some polymer screening workflows in the industry that suggest selecting the candidate polymers based solely on their molecular size and the size distribution of the rock pore throats. This work emphasizes the need for careful core-flood experiments to assess polymer entrapment mechanisms and their implication on short and long-term injectivity.

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