4.6 Article

Experimental study on the self-expanding sweep and microscopic oil displacement of amphiphilic carbon-based nanofluids

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY
Volume 47, Issue 45, Pages 20928-20942

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3nj03865c

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study presents the synthesis of amphiphilic graphene oxide (GOA) and investigates its enhanced oil recovery efficiency and structural attributes. The resulting GOA demonstrates excellent dispersion and stability in brine and exhibits remarkable interfacial behavior. It can significantly reduce surface tension and oil-water interfacial tension, modify the oil-water interface, and create a high-viscosity emulsion. The experiments show that GOA can enhance recovery rates and facilitate the extraction of previously unrecovered crude oil from confined pore spaces.
Carbon-based nanomaterials possess numerous distinctive properties, such as their small size and interface effects. However, the practical utility of these materials is somewhat constrained under harsh environmental conditions like high salinity and elevated temperatures. To expand the potential applications of these promising nanomaterials, we present the synthesis of amphiphilic graphene oxide (GOA) from graphene oxide through the utilization of a silane coupling agent (KH550) and polyethylene glycol. We investigate the enhanced oil recovery efficiency and structural attributes of the synthesized GOA materials through a comprehensive approach involving experimental characterization, physical simulations, and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The resulting GOA demonstrates excellent dispersion in brine (20 x 104 mg L-1) and exhibits remarkable stability even under high-temperature conditions (90 degrees C). The experiments have demonstrated that GOA can significantly reduce surface tension and oil-water interfacial tension, even at a low critical concentration of 40 mg L-1. The amphiphilic nature of GOA allows it to adsorb onto solid surfaces, altering the contact angle from 110.9 degrees to 93.7 degrees. This exceptional interfacial behavior enables GOA to modify the oil-water interface, resulting in the creation of a Pickering emulsion with 3.2 times higher viscosity compared to that of crude oil, even at 80% water content. This highly viscous emulsion can increase the resistance to seepage to modulate formation inhomogeneity. Online NMR replacement experiments reveal that injecting 0.6 pore volumes of GOA can enhance recovery rates by 19.7% compared to conventional brine displacement methods, facilitating the extraction of previously unrecovered crude oil from confined pore spaces. We anticipate that this high-performance material will find diverse applications within the petroleum industry in the future. Carbon-based nanomaterials possess numerous distinctive properties, such as their small size and interface effects.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available