Abstract

Abstract This paper summarizes the overall response from the CO2-foam injection in the Salt Creek field, Natrona County, Wyoming. Conformance control of CO2 by creating foam between supercritical CO2 and brine to improve the sweep efficiency is documented in this paper. The foam was implemented in an inverted fivespot pattern in the Salt Creek field where the second Wall Creek (WC2) sandstone formation is the primary producing interval, with a net thickness of about 80 ft and at a depth of approximately 2,200 ft. The initial phase of the foam pilot design involving identifying the pilot area, performing coreflood experiments, performaing dynamic reservoir simulation for history match, and forecasting with foam have been documented in the literature. As a part of the foam pilot monitoring, a gas tracer study was performed before and after the injection of foam in the reservoir. The initial planning, monitoring, and part of foam response is covered in earlier publications. The last surfactant injection in the field was in June 2016. This paper provides the complete analysis of the results from the foam pilot. The foam pilot was successful in demonstrating the deeper conformance control and improvement in sweep efficiency, which resulted in 25,000 bbl of incremental oil. Also overall, a 22% decrease in CO2 injection amount is realized due to better utilization of CO2 compared to the baseline.

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