Reservoir heterogeneity significantly affects reservoir flooding efficiency and the formation and distribution of residual oil. As an effective method for enhancing recovery, polymer–surfactant (SP) flooding has a complex mechanism of action in inhomogeneous reservoirs. In this study, the effect of reservoir heterogeneity on the SP drive was investigated by designing core parallel flooding experiments combined with NMR and CT scanning techniques, taking conglomerate reservoirs in a Xinjiang oilfield as the research object. The experimental results show that inter-layer heterogeneity significantly affects water flooding efficiency and SP driving in low-permeability cores—the larger the permeability difference is, the more obvious the effect is—while it has almost no effect on high-permeability cores. The limited recovery enhancement in low-permeability cores is mainly due to the small percentage of contributing pores. When the permeability difference undergoes an extreme increase, the polymer molecular weight is biased towards higher values; when the polymer molecular weight is fixed, the recovery enhancement of low-permeability cores may be comparable to that of high-permeability cores when the permeability difference is extremely small. However, the recovery enhancement of the former is smaller than that of the latter when the permeability difference is extremely large. Due to intra-layer heterogeneity, there is a serious fingering phenomenon in the flooding stage, while in the SP flooding stage, recovery enhancement is most significant in the 5–20 μm pore range. This study provides an important geological basis for the rational development of a chemical flooding programme.
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