4.6 Article

Displacement behavior and mechanism of long-term water flooding in sandstone oil reservoirs

Journal

JOURNAL OF CENTRAL SOUTH UNIVERSITY
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 834-847

Publisher

JOURNAL OF CENTRAL SOUTH UNIV
DOI: 10.1007/s11771-021-4648-3

Keywords

long-term water flooding; sandstone reservoir; relative permeability curve; wettability

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51674273]
  2. Major Science and Technology Projects of CNOOC, China [CNOOC-KJ135ZDXM22LTD02SZ2016]

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Experimental studies were conducted to investigate the effects of factors such as PV number, viscosity, and displacement rate during long-term water flooding (LTWF) on sandstone oil reservoirs. The research findings indicate that increased viscosity leads to decreased water phase permeability, increased residual oil saturation, and earlier increase in water content rate. Furthermore, higher water flooding rates result in higher ultimate recovery, and higher asphaltene content contributes to higher viscosity and more oil-wet reservoir conditions. Additionally, after LTWF, the wettability tends to become more water-wet, which is beneficial for heavy oil recovery.
Sandstone oil reservoirs with huge bottom water and high permeability are generally developed with high flow rate. After long-term water flooding (LTWF), the water flooding characteristics are quite different from that of original reservoir. In this paper, the effects of the PV number, viscosity, and displacement rate during LTWF are studied through experiments. The mechanism is analyzed based on analysis of changes in oil composition, rock mineral composition and wettability. The oil-water relative permeability curves, oil recovery and wettability were obtained with new experiments methods, which avoids the oil metering error by measuring oil and water separately. The research indicates that when the viscosity increases, the water phase permeability decreases, the residual oil saturation increases, and the water content rate increases earlier. A higher water flooding rate results in a higher ultimate recovery. A higher asphaltene content results in a higher viscosity and more oil-wet reservoir conditions. After LTWF, the wettability tends to water-wet, which is more favorable for heavy oil recovery. Moreover, LTWF reduces the clay content, which creates a more water-wet surface and a larger reservoir pore throat environment. This research provides insightful characteristics of offshore sandstone oil reservoirs, which can be used to enhance oil recovery.

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