Abstract

The conventional liquid acid has several shortcomings in the acidizing process of fractured-vuggy carbonate reservoirs, including high filtration loss, fast reaction rate, high friction resistance, and difficult flowback. To address these issues, a new atomizing acid acidizing technology is proposed, combining the gas injection development practice from the fractured-vuggy carbonate reservoir in the Tahe oilfield. The laboratory experiments were conducted to optimize the type and concentration of atomized acid, iron ion stabilizer, corrosion inhibitor, and atomization stabilizer. The acid atomization rate was evaluated under different combinations of gas and liquid injection flows using a self-made atomized acid well migration simulator, and the best atomization scheme was selected. Furthermore, a kinetic experiment for the acid–rock reaction was carried out to evaluate the retarding performance of the atomized acid. The optimized formula for the atomizing acid system consists of 15~25% hydrochloric acid, 0.005% atomizing stabilizer (AEO-7), 1% iron ion stabilizer (EET), 1.5% corrosion inhibitor (EEH-160), and water. The optimal gas and acid injection scheme is gas injection at 2m3/min and acid injection at 10 mL/min, which maintains an atomization rate of over 80% after the acid mist migrates through the wellbore. Compared with gelling acid, the acid–rock reaction rate of atomized acid is 8.5, 9.1, and 10.6 times slower under acid concentrations of 15%, 20%, and 25% respectively. The retarding effect of atomized acid is superior, facilitating etching and initiating underdeveloped gas drive channels and thereby increasing the probability of gas communication with new reservoirs. The research findings presented in this paper establish a theoretical foundation for the practical implementation of the atomized acid acidizing process in the field.

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