Abstract
In this work the effect of wettability in waterfloods of viscous oil is investigated in a combination of experiments in sandpacks and microfluidic chips. Thirty-nine sand-pack flooding experiments were conducted to investigate the effect of core wettability, oil viscosity, and injection velocity on oil recovery to water flooding. An in-line densitometer, installed downstream of the core, was used to record the instantaneous fluid production and help understanding the mechanism of oil displacement in porous media. Additional microfluidic experiments were conducted to understand the mechanism of viscous oil displacement in imbibition vs. drainage.The effect of injection velocity on oil recovery is a strong function of core wettability and oil viscosity. In water-wet systems, below a critical viscosity (∼60 mPa s), increasing injection velocity enhances oil displacement. In more viscous oil systems, injection velocity reduction improves imbibition. This is confirmed through visualization in microfluidic tests. Post breakthrough bypassed oil is produced in the form of low viscosity oil in water emulsion. In oil-wet waterflooding, oil imbibition into the preformed water channels pinches off (snaps-off) some continuous fingers, diverting water to un-swept regions. This temporary channel closure can explain the cyclic pressure build-ups observed oil-wet core flooding experiments. casein oil-wet systems, oil is produced as a series of viscous oil slugs rather than an emulsion.A new dynamic dimensionless time is presented to quantify imbibition time to which imbibition data are well correlated. This number along with the previously presented “viscous drainage number” can quantify different mechanisms responsible for oil displacement in systems of different viscosity ratio, injection velocity, and core wettability. The proposed dimensionless numbers can be used to determine expected viscous oil recovery efficiency in different wettability systems.
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