Numerical investigation of optimum ions concentration in low salinity waterflooding

Injecting low saline water is one of the practices used to improve hydrocarbon production that has recently significantly grown due to its advantages over seawater and chemical flooding. Although many theories and mechanisms have been provided on how additional oil recovery has been achieved utilizing...

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Main Authors: Hisham Ben Mahmud, Walid Mohamed Mahmud, Shattia Arumugam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Yandy Scientific Press 2020-09-01
Series:Advances in Geo-Energy Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.yandy-ager.com/index.php/ager/article/view/230
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spelling doaj-c11f58f10bf647508cba02dcd4d36fb42020-11-25T03:41:07ZengYandy Scientific PressAdvances in Geo-Energy Research2208-598X2208-598X2020-09-014327128510.46690/ager.2020.03.05Numerical investigation of optimum ions concentration in low salinity waterfloodingHisham Ben Mahmud0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8231-9730Walid Mohamed Mahmud1Shattia Arumugam2Department of Petroleum Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Science, Curtin University Malaysia, 98009 Miri Sarawak, MalaysiaDepartment of Petroleum Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Tripoli, Tripoli, LibyaField Engineer, Weatherford Sdn Bhd, 50450 Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaInjecting low saline water is one of the practices used to improve hydrocarbon production that has recently significantly grown due to its advantages over seawater and chemical flooding. Although many theories and mechanisms have been provided on how additional oil recovery has been achieved utilizing low salinity waterflooding, the principle funda- mentals of the mechanism(s) are still ambiguous. This article investigates the potential use of low salinity waterflooding (LSWF) to improve oil production from a sandstone formation. A 3D field-scale model was developed using Computer Modeling Group ( generalized equation-of-state model simulator) based on a mature oil field data. The developed model was validated against actual field data where only 8% deviation was observed. Simulation analysis indicated that multi-component ion exchange is a key factor to improve oil production because it alters rock wettability from oil-wet to water-wet. Simulation sensitivity studies showed that low salinity water flooding provided higher oil production than high water salinity flooding. Moreover, simulation showed early breakthrough time of low salinity water injection can provide high oil recovery up to 71%. Therefore, implementing LSWF instantly after first stage production provides recovery gains up to 75%. The determined optimal injected brine composition concentration for Ca2+, Mg2+ and Na+ are 450, 221, and 60 ppm, respectively. During LSWF, a high divalent cations and low monovalent cations’ concentration can be recommended for injected brine and formation aquifer for beneficial wettability alteration. Simulation also showed that reservoir temperature influenced the alteration of ion exchange wettability during LSWF as oil recovery increased with temperature. Therefore, high temperature sandstone reservoirs can be considered as a good candidate for LSWF.https://www.yandy-ager.com/index.php/ager/article/view/230multiphase flowlow-salinity waterfloodingion exchange; ph increaseenhanced oil recoverywettabilitycmg-gem simulationtemperature
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hisham Ben Mahmud
Walid Mohamed Mahmud
Shattia Arumugam
spellingShingle Hisham Ben Mahmud
Walid Mohamed Mahmud
Shattia Arumugam
Numerical investigation of optimum ions concentration in low salinity waterflooding
Advances in Geo-Energy Research
multiphase flow
low-salinity waterflooding
ion exchange; ph increase
enhanced oil recovery
wettability
cmg-gem simulation
temperature
author_facet Hisham Ben Mahmud
Walid Mohamed Mahmud
Shattia Arumugam
author_sort Hisham Ben Mahmud
title Numerical investigation of optimum ions concentration in low salinity waterflooding
title_short Numerical investigation of optimum ions concentration in low salinity waterflooding
title_full Numerical investigation of optimum ions concentration in low salinity waterflooding
title_fullStr Numerical investigation of optimum ions concentration in low salinity waterflooding
title_full_unstemmed Numerical investigation of optimum ions concentration in low salinity waterflooding
title_sort numerical investigation of optimum ions concentration in low salinity waterflooding
publisher Yandy Scientific Press
series Advances in Geo-Energy Research
issn 2208-598X
2208-598X
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Injecting low saline water is one of the practices used to improve hydrocarbon production that has recently significantly grown due to its advantages over seawater and chemical flooding. Although many theories and mechanisms have been provided on how additional oil recovery has been achieved utilizing low salinity waterflooding, the principle funda- mentals of the mechanism(s) are still ambiguous. This article investigates the potential use of low salinity waterflooding (LSWF) to improve oil production from a sandstone formation. A 3D field-scale model was developed using Computer Modeling Group ( generalized equation-of-state model simulator) based on a mature oil field data. The developed model was validated against actual field data where only 8% deviation was observed. Simulation analysis indicated that multi-component ion exchange is a key factor to improve oil production because it alters rock wettability from oil-wet to water-wet. Simulation sensitivity studies showed that low salinity water flooding provided higher oil production than high water salinity flooding. Moreover, simulation showed early breakthrough time of low salinity water injection can provide high oil recovery up to 71%. Therefore, implementing LSWF instantly after first stage production provides recovery gains up to 75%. The determined optimal injected brine composition concentration for Ca2+, Mg2+ and Na+ are 450, 221, and 60 ppm, respectively. During LSWF, a high divalent cations and low monovalent cations’ concentration can be recommended for injected brine and formation aquifer for beneficial wettability alteration. Simulation also showed that reservoir temperature influenced the alteration of ion exchange wettability during LSWF as oil recovery increased with temperature. Therefore, high temperature sandstone reservoirs can be considered as a good candidate for LSWF.
topic multiphase flow
low-salinity waterflooding
ion exchange; ph increase
enhanced oil recovery
wettability
cmg-gem simulation
temperature
url https://www.yandy-ager.com/index.php/ager/article/view/230
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