4.5 Article

Enhancement of oil recovery by emulsion injection: A pore scale analysis from X-ray micro-tomography measurements

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Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.petrol.2020.108134

Keywords

EOR; Emulsion; Secondary recovery; Microfluidics; Micro-CT; 3D image analysis

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior - Brasil (CAPES) [88881.171173/2018-01]
  2. CNPq
  3. FAPERJ
  4. French National Research Agency (ANR)

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The efficiency of emulsion injection as an enhanced oil recovery method was studied in a synthetic porous medium, where micro-CT images showed that the oil droplets of the emulsion diverted the water path, mobilizing previously trapped oil ganglia.
The efficiency of emulsion injection as an enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method is investigated in a synthetic porous medium consisting of sintered bi-disperse glass beads, which emulates the porosity and permeability of real oil-bearing rocks. Synthetic seawater and an oil-in-water emulsion are successively used to displace a mineral oil which initially saturates the porous space. Micro-CT images with a 4 mu m resolution are acquired at the end of the different stages of the process; the water phase is doped with KI to optimize the contrast between the liquid phases. Thus, three-dimensional (3D) images showing the beads, doped water and residual oil present a 3-modal histogram. After denoising with a non-local means filter, alignment and segmentation, the 3D images provide the spatial distributions of the water and oil phases, and thus allow comparing the populations of residual oil ganglia prior to and after the injection of the emulsion. Visual comparison of the spatial phase distributions show that the oil droplets of the oil-water emulsion divert the water path, mobilizing previously trapped oil ganglia. The probability density functions (PDFs) of different geometrical properties of the trapped oil ganglia (10(4) ganglia with volumes spanning 6 orders of magnitude) after water injection show well defined power law behaviors between a size corresponding to the typical pore throat and that typical of 10 typical pore volumes, and a few very large clusters of sizes between 10 and 5x 10(5) typical pore volumes. The largest of them alone accounts for 97% of the trapped oil. The same PDFs after emulsion injection demonstrate successful fragmentation of these few very large ganglia, which in this case is the key to efficient EOR procedure through diversion of the water flow by emulsion oil droplets to less permeable regions.

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