Abstract

In recent years, a newly developed dispersed particle gel (DPG) has attracted significant attention because of its excellent properties and a good application prospect in an enhanced oil recovery process. The preparation method is convenient and easy to scale up for the field application. The dispersed particle gel with sizes ranging from submicron to micron can block the high permeability layers by accumulating in large pore spaces or directly plugging small pore throats. Furthermore, the dispersed particle gels can achieve in-depth profile control due to the elastic deformation and migration into the reservoir's porous media. These characteristics have demonstrated great potential for the dispersed particle gels to strengthen the alkali/surfactant/polymer combination flooding system. The polymers used are the principal sources of viscosity in the system; the surfactant and alkaline produce the synergistic effect by generating the ultralow oil-water interfacial tension. The added dispersed particle gel has a synergistic viscosity increase effect, temperature tolerance, and thermal stability. However, the combined flooding system suffers from the surfactant loss and chromatographic separation that affect the chemical components' synergistic effect for enhanced oil recovery. In this paper, the chromatography separation effects linked to a new method of oil displacement mechanism based on the dispersed particle gel strengthened Alkali/Surfactant/Polymer as a novel combination flooding system was investigated. The addition of dispersed particle gel in the Alkali/Surfactant/Polymer combination flooding system could interleave in the system's network structure and increase the viscosity stability by strengthening the flooding system to improve the oil recovery capacity. The novel dispersed particle gel strengthened alkali/surfactant/polymer flooding systems have a high displacement efficiency and a better-swept volume capacity considering the oilfield requirement for the enhanced oil recovery process. The effects of polymer, surfactant, alkaline, and dispersed particle gel concentration on the combination flooding system were evaluated, furthermore the impact of external factors on the system such as salinity; aging time was described. The results showed that the effects of external factors aging time and salinity slightly affected the system's interfacial reduction capacity. The increase in interface elasticity produced significantly favorable effects on system stability. For the displacement mechanism, when the dispersed particle gel strengthened alkali/surfactant/polymer combination flooding system moved in a porous medium, the dispersed particle gel passed through the pore throat directly or by deformation depending on the system's pressure variation.Furthermore, the phase separation was formed due to the combined component's effects, resulting in the differential migration between the systems, which led to different degrees of chromatographic separation phenomenon to affect the displacement mechanism. As we can see in the micro visualization simulation experiment, the residual oil interacted with Alkali molecules and form the in-situ surfactant, which makes the remaining oil emulsified, as well the surfactant adsorbed by DPG particles, make the crude oil emulsified and get enhanced. The chromatography and micro visualization experiments results of the dispersed particle gel strengthened alkali/surfactant/polymer combination flooding system indicated a favorable application of the system in an enhanced oil recovery process.

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