Simulation of Surfactant Oil Recovery Processes and the Role of Phase Behaviour Parameters
Chemical Enhanced Oil Recovery (cEOR) processes comprise a number of techniques whichmodify the rock/fluid properties in order to mobilize the remaining oil. Among these, surfactantflooding is one of the most used and well-known processes; it is mainly used to decrease the interfacialenergy between...
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doaj-5ecae1f5790540a998225d8f5534a2f72020-11-24T21:41:35ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732019-03-0112698310.3390/en12060983en12060983Simulation of Surfactant Oil Recovery Processes and the Role of Phase Behaviour ParametersPablo Druetta0Francesco Picchioni1Department of Chemical Engineering, ENTEG, University of Groningen, 9700 AB Groningen, The NetherlandsDepartment of Chemical Engineering, ENTEG, University of Groningen, 9700 AB Groningen, The NetherlandsChemical Enhanced Oil Recovery (cEOR) processes comprise a number of techniques whichmodify the rock/fluid properties in order to mobilize the remaining oil. Among these, surfactantflooding is one of the most used and well-known processes; it is mainly used to decrease the interfacialenergy between the phases and thus lowering the residual oil saturation. A novel two-dimensionalflooding simulator is presented for a four-component (water, petroleum, surfactant, salt), two-phase(aqueous, oleous) model in porous media. The system is then solved using a second-order finitedifference method with the IMPEC (IMplicit Pressure and Explicit Concentration) scheme. The oilrecovery efficiency evidenced a strong dependency on the chemical component properties and itsphase behaviour. In order to accurately model the latter, the simulator uses and improves a simplifiedternary diagram, introducing the dependence of the partition coefficient on the salt concentration.Results showed that the surfactant partitioning between the phases is the most important parameterduring the EOR process. Moreover, the presence of salt affects this partitioning coefficient, modifyingconsiderably the sweeping efficiency. Therefore, the control of the salinity in the injection water isdeemed fundamental for the success of EOR operations with surfactants.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/6/983Enhanced Oil Recoverysurfactantphase behaviourreservoir simulationTotal Variation Diminishing |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Pablo Druetta Francesco Picchioni |
spellingShingle |
Pablo Druetta Francesco Picchioni Simulation of Surfactant Oil Recovery Processes and the Role of Phase Behaviour Parameters Energies Enhanced Oil Recovery surfactant phase behaviour reservoir simulation Total Variation Diminishing |
author_facet |
Pablo Druetta Francesco Picchioni |
author_sort |
Pablo Druetta |
title |
Simulation of Surfactant Oil Recovery Processes and
the Role of Phase Behaviour Parameters |
title_short |
Simulation of Surfactant Oil Recovery Processes and
the Role of Phase Behaviour Parameters |
title_full |
Simulation of Surfactant Oil Recovery Processes and
the Role of Phase Behaviour Parameters |
title_fullStr |
Simulation of Surfactant Oil Recovery Processes and
the Role of Phase Behaviour Parameters |
title_full_unstemmed |
Simulation of Surfactant Oil Recovery Processes and
the Role of Phase Behaviour Parameters |
title_sort |
simulation of surfactant oil recovery processes and
the role of phase behaviour parameters |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Energies |
issn |
1996-1073 |
publishDate |
2019-03-01 |
description |
Chemical Enhanced Oil Recovery (cEOR) processes comprise a number of techniques whichmodify the rock/fluid properties in order to mobilize the remaining oil. Among these, surfactantflooding is one of the most used and well-known processes; it is mainly used to decrease the interfacialenergy between the phases and thus lowering the residual oil saturation. A novel two-dimensionalflooding simulator is presented for a four-component (water, petroleum, surfactant, salt), two-phase(aqueous, oleous) model in porous media. The system is then solved using a second-order finitedifference method with the IMPEC (IMplicit Pressure and Explicit Concentration) scheme. The oilrecovery efficiency evidenced a strong dependency on the chemical component properties and itsphase behaviour. In order to accurately model the latter, the simulator uses and improves a simplifiedternary diagram, introducing the dependence of the partition coefficient on the salt concentration.Results showed that the surfactant partitioning between the phases is the most important parameterduring the EOR process. Moreover, the presence of salt affects this partitioning coefficient, modifyingconsiderably the sweeping efficiency. Therefore, the control of the salinity in the injection water isdeemed fundamental for the success of EOR operations with surfactants. |
topic |
Enhanced Oil Recovery surfactant phase behaviour reservoir simulation Total Variation Diminishing |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/6/983 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT pablodruetta simulationofsurfactantoilrecoveryprocessesandtheroleofphasebehaviourparameters AT francescopicchioni simulationofsurfactantoilrecoveryprocessesandtheroleofphasebehaviourparameters |
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