Abstract

The work is devoted to the numerical simulation of the flow of simple and viscoelastic (polymer solution) fluids through a fracture by using polymer solutions for enhanced oil recovery from a reservoir. Polymer solutions have viscoelastic properties. Therefore, when polymer solution flows through the slot, we use the well-known Maxwell’s fluid model with the Jaumann derivative to evaluate deformation characteristics of the flow (stream functions, distributions of the longitudinal velocity gradient and normal stress) resulting in the manifestation of abnormal (compared with the behaviour of the ordinary fluid) effects. The case of slow flow is considered. In this case, the inertial terms can be neglected, the velocities, stresses, and stream functions can be written as the decomposition by Weisenberg number, and we can assume that the Weissenberg number is less than one. The determined regularities of viscoelastic (polymer solution) liquid behaviour with longitudinal velocity gradient and the elastic deformations effects manifested in this case have a decisive meaning in understanding the mechanism of anomalously high oil recovery capacity of a reservoir by using water-polymer flooding of the fractured-porous reservoir. Understanding the nature of the effects of elastic deformations under the conditions of water-polymer flooding of the fractured-porous reservoir enables hydrodynamic calculations of the optimal flow of the polymer solution. One of the main issues that need to be solved when developing the technology for increasing oil recovery from formations using polymer solutions is to determine the optimal flow regime in the fractured-porous reservoir. The calculation results verify the ideas obtained from the experimental solution of this problem concerning the strain-stress state of polymer macromolecules (liquid elements) during polymer flow in the inlet area of the fracture in the oil reservoir and confirm the possibility of using numerical analysis of convergent polymer flow for calculating longitudinal velocity gradients in the inlet area of the fracture and can also serve as additional substantiation of the proposed earlier mechanism for increasing oil recovery from reservoirs by using polymer solutions.

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