Abstract

Spontaneous imbibition is a key mechanism of oil recovery in naturally fractured reservoirs. Many enhanced oil recovery techniques, such as modified salinity brine injection, have been suggested to improve spontaneous imbibition efficiency. To predict oil recovery by spontaneous imbibition process, scaling equations have been developed in the literature where almost none of them include the effect of two critical aspects. One aspect is the different ionic composition of injecting brine from connate brine. Another aspect is the effect of combination/interaction of a lower salinity imbibing (injecting) brine with connate brine. This research takes into account these two aspects to propose a new empirical scaling equation to scale oil recovery by modified salinity imbibing brines in limestone rocks. For this purpose, the results of available 59 tests from 14 references performed on various limestone rock samples collected from different formations and regions were used. The tests had been performed at high temperatures and on aged cores, which makes the proposed scaling equation more realistic and applicable to reservoir conditions. For the first time, the imbibing and connate brines ionic strengths are included in the equation due to the mechanism of the modified salinity brine injection method. In addition, the scaled spontaneous imbibition recovery data by the new equation was matched using two mathematical expressions based on the Aronofsky model and Fries and Dreyer model which can be used to derive transfer functions for simulation of spontaneous imbibition oil recovery by modified salinity brine injection in fractured limestone reservoirs.

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