Abstract

Compatible surfactant-polymer (SP) hybrid systems at high temperature are in great demand due to the necessity of chemical flooding in high-temperature oil reservoirs. The rheological properties of novel SP systems were studied. The SP system used in this study consists of a commercial polymer and four in-house synthesized polyoxyethylene cationic gemini surfactants with various spacers (mono phenyl and biphenyl ring) and different counterions (bromide and chloride). The impact of surfactant concentration, spacer nature, counterions, and temperature on the rheological features of SP solutions was examined using oscillation and shear measurements. The results were compared with a pure commercial polymer. All surfactants exhibited good thermal stability in seawater with no precipitation. Shear viscosity and storage modulus were measured as a function of shear rate and angular frequency, respectively. The experimental results revealed that the novel SP solution with a mono phenyl and chloride counterions produces a better performance in comparison with the SP solution, which contains mono phenyl and bromide counterions. Moreover, the effect is enhanced when the mono phenyl ring is replaced with a biphenyl ring. Shear viscosity and storage modulus decrease by increasing surfactant concentration at the same temperature, due to the charge screening effect. Storage modulus and complex viscosity reduce by increasing the temperature at a constant angular frequency of 10 rad/s. Among all studied SP systems, a surfactant containing a biphenyl ring in the spacer with chloride as a counterion has the least effect on the shear viscosity of the polymer. This study improves the understanding of tuning the surfactant composition in making SP solutions with better rheological properties.

Highlights

  • Primary, secondary, and tertiary recovery methods are the three broad categories of oil recovery mechanisms

  • Enhanced oil recovery (EOR) techniques lie in the tertiary domain, used to unlock the remaining significant amount of oil

  • This paper presents an extensive study of rheological properties of novel SP solutions considering the effect of surfactant concentration, temperature, spacer nature, and counterions

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Summary

Introduction

Secondary, and tertiary recovery methods are the three broad categories of oil recovery mechanisms. Waterflooding is a widely applied secondary oil recovery technique that recovers approximately one-third (1/3) of the original oil in place [1]. Approximately 2 trillion barrels of conventional oil and 5 trillion barrels of unconventional heavy oil is left inside the reservoirs after employing traditional methods to recover oil [2,3]. Enhanced oil recovery (EOR) techniques lie in the tertiary domain, used to unlock the remaining significant amount of oil. Numerous EOR techniques have been developed to recover more oil, such as gas injection, chemical methods, and thermal methods [4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. Miscible gas injection is an effective method for high-pressure reservoirs

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