Abstract

The oilfield water in the Upper Sandstone Member of the Zubair reservoir (Barriemian-Hauterivian) at Rumaila North Oil Field was investigated for the interpretation of salinity and geochemical evolution of brine compositions. The interaction of the oilfield water with reservoir rock resulted in a brine water derived from the marine water origin of partial mixing with meteoric water similar to the compositional ranges of formation water from Gulf of Mexico offshore/onshore Mesozoic reservoirs. The high TDS (207350- 230100; average 215625 mg/L) is consistent with the electrical conductivity (340362-372762; average 351024μs), and predominantly represented by Cl (123679 mg/L) as anions and (29200 and 14674 mg/L) for Na and Ca as cations respectively. The contribution of cation (epm%) are as Na (70.2), Ca (18.9), Mg (8.1) and K (1.7); and anion as Cl (99.7), SO4 (0.25), HCO3 (0.07) and CO3 (0.005). sodium (57550-60500mg/L) is greater than of seawater six times, calcium and magnesium three times greater, and chloride 6.5 times greater, but Sulfate is depleted to six times less due to a sulfur release from sulphates and link with different hydrocarbon species, precipices as native sulphur and link with hydrogen forming H2S. The Zubair oilfield water is characterised by acidic pH (pH=5.2- 5.77) enhanced petrophysical properties, high specific gravity (1.228) predicts a high fluid pressure (4866 psi), hydrocarbon saturation (0.43%), water saturation (0.57%) and porosity (12.7). The Mineral saturation model indicates that the Zubair oilfield water is an unsaturated water with respect to all suggested minerals at 5.45, but at simulated pH, brucite being an equilibrium at pH 9.12, but brucite and portlandite being supersaturated at pH 11.9. The mineral solubility responses to the changes in temperature, pressure, pH, Eh, and ionic strength, thereby formation damage is proportionally developed.

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