Abstract

This paper presents a nonionic surfactant in the anionic surfactant pair (ternary mixture) that influences the hydrophobicity of the alkaline–surfactant–polymer (ASP) slug within low-salinity formation water, an environment that constrains optimal designs of the salinity gradient and phase types. The hydrophobicity effectively reduced the optimum salinity, but achieving as much by mixing various surfactants has been challenging. We conducted a phase behavior test and a coreflooding test, and the results prove the effectiveness of the nonionic surfactant in enlarging the chemical applicability by making ASP flooding more hydrophobic. The proposed ASP mixture consisted of 0.2 wt% sodium carbonate, 0.25 wt% anionic surfactant pair, and 0.2 wt% nonionic surfactant, and 0.15 wt% hydrolyzed polyacrylamide. The nonionic surfactant decreased the optimum salinity to 1.1 wt% NaCl compared to the 1.7 wt% NaCl of the reference case with heavy alcohol present instead of the nonionic surfactant. The coreflooding test confirmed the field applicability of the nonionic surfactant by recovering more oil, with the proposed scheme producing up to 74% of residual oil after extensive waterflooding compared to 51% of cumulative oil recovery with the reference case. The nonionic surfactant led to a Winsor type III microemulsion with a 0.85 pore volume while the reference case had a 0.50 pore volume. The nonionic surfactant made ASP flooding more hydrophobic, maintained a separate phase of the surfactant between the oil and aqueous phases to achieve ultra-low interfacial tension, and recovered the oil effectively.

Highlights

  • Alkaline–surfactant–polymer (ASP) flooding is a technique suitable for the many mature fields that have a low to moderate temperature and medium viscosity [1,2,3,4]

  • This paper describes our experimental investigation of the effects of a nonionic surfactant to modify the hydrophobicity and decrease the optimum salinity when constrained by a low salinity environment

  • This paper presented positive effects of a nonionic surfactant mixed with an anionic surfactant pair to overcome the low salinity constraint

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Summary

Introduction

Alkaline–surfactant–polymer (ASP) flooding is a technique suitable for the many mature fields that have a low to moderate temperature and medium viscosity [1,2,3,4]. Low salinity, similar to brackish water, hinders the application of ASP, and low-salinity reservoirs are dominant in onshore oil fields such as Meruap and Sukananti in Indonesia [5,6,7]. ASP flooding is an enhanced oil recovery (EOR) technology that involves injecting a mixture of alkaline, surfactant, and polymer materials that act together. The alkali forms an in-situ soap from its reaction with the acid content in the crude oil, and it acts as a sacrificial agent to reduce the surfactant adsorption.

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