Abstract
It is well-established that injecting water with significantly lower salinity than the formation water salinity may give increased oil recovery. Although less well studied, the observed low-salinity effect has drawn attention to possible benefits from combining low-salinity water with traditional enhanced oil recovery techniques, such as surfactant, polymer, alkali, etc., to make the overall recovery process more efficient. Surfactant injection, for example, reduces the interfacial tension (IFT) between the injected surfactant solution and the oil, thus mobilizing capillary trapped oil and/or reducing the tendency for capillary trapping. The majority of literature on the topic of low salinity and surfactant flooding primarily addresses one or the other. This study, however, compares the combined effect of reduction in IFT and low-salinity conditions to the effect of a sole reduction in IFT on oil recovery in intermediate-wet Berea sandstone cores. We find that reductions in residual oil saturation, at similar capillary numbers and phase behavior conditions, are higher for the low-salinity surfactant injection experiments compared to regular surfactant injection experiments. This strongly indicates that there is a combined effect of IFT reduction and low salinity on recovery compared to that from a reduction in IFT alone.
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