Abstract

Polymer flooding is one of the most well-known research interests in the enhanced oil recovery (EOR) due to the excess oil production and limited petroleum reserve. Commercial polymers such as polyacrylamide (PAM) and its hydrolyzed form (HPAM) can be easily degraded at high temperature, high salinity, and high shear rate in attempt to the EOR purposes for the harsh reservoir conditions. In this work, a hydrophobically modified copolymer consisting of acrylamide and styrene (HSPAM) was produced via inverse emulsion polymerization as a wettability modifier and viscosifying agent, applicable under harsh reservoir conditions to direct insights into the synergic oil recovery pore scale mechanisms and overcoming the aforementioned challenges through the EOR process. In the first part of this study, a set of analytical techniques including FTIR, NMR, TGA, and molecular weight measurement was carried out, confirming successfully incorporation of styrene monomer in water-soluble skeleton and higher thermal resistivity of HSPAM compared with HPAM. By analyzing the rheological behavior of HSPAM under harsh reservoir conditions, it was found that the viscosity of HSPAM aqueous solution was increasingly influenced by the total dissolved solids, even up to 40,572 mg/L. In the second part, stability tests, contact angle (CA), interfacial tension (IFT), and carbonate coated glass micromodel flooding experiments were conducted by deionized water (DIW), seawater (SW) and formation brine (FB) in the absence and presence of HSPAM and HPAM. HSPAM illustrated a great stability in seawater and formation brine in comparison with HPAM after 120 days at 80 °C. The presence of HSPAM in seawater resulted in a more water-wet state up to 42° compared to HPAM by contact angle of 31° after 72 h. Findings provided synergic oil recovery mechanisms approved by emulsification and coalition phenomena to show a better wettability alteration and IFT reduction for HSPAM in spite of HPAM alongside drastically improving the brine-based flooding performance, yielding an ultimate recovery of about 82% original oil in place (OOIP).

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call