Static and Dynamic Performance of Wet Foam and Polymer-Enhanced Foam in the Presence of Heavy Oil

Inadequate sweep efficiency is one of the main concerns in conventional heavy oil recovery processes. Alternative processes are therefore needed to increase heavy oil sweep efficiency. Foam injection has gained interest in conventional oil recovery in recent times as it can control the mobility rati...

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Main Authors: Ali Telmadarreie, Japan J. Trivedi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-09-01
Series:Colloids and Interfaces
Subjects:
EOR
SAG
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2504-5377/2/3/38
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spelling doaj-d70906da886f4366897310ad9d9d11892020-11-24T21:26:09ZengMDPI AGColloids and Interfaces2504-53772018-09-01233810.3390/colloids2030038colloids2030038Static and Dynamic Performance of Wet Foam and Polymer-Enhanced Foam in the Presence of Heavy OilAli Telmadarreie0Japan J. Trivedi1Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, Schulich School of Engineering, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, CanadaSchool of Mining and Petroleum, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2R3, CanadaInadequate sweep efficiency is one of the main concerns in conventional heavy oil recovery processes. Alternative processes are therefore needed to increase heavy oil sweep efficiency. Foam injection has gained interest in conventional oil recovery in recent times as it can control the mobility ratio and improve the sweep efficiency over chemical or gas flooding. However, most of the studies have focused on light crude oil. This study aims to investigate the static and dynamic performances of foam and polymer-enhanced foam (PEF) in the presence of heavy oil. Static and dynamic experiments were conducted to investigate the potential of foam and PEF for heavy oil recovery. Static analysis included foam/PEF stability, decay profile, and image analysis. A linear visual sand pack was used to visualize the performance of CO2 foam and CO2 PEF in porous media (dynamic experiments). Nonionic, anionic, and cationic surfactants were used as the foaming agents. Static stability results showed that the anionic surfactant generated relatively more stable foam, even in the presence of heavy oil. Slower liquid drainage and collapse rates for PEF compared to that of foam were the key observations through foam static analyses. Besides improving heavy oil recovery, the addition of polymer accelerated foam generation and propagation in porous media saturated with heavy oil. Visual analysis demonstrated more stable frontal displacement and higher sweep efficiency of PEF compared to conventional foam flooding. Unlike foam injection, lesser channeling (foam collapse) was observed during PEF injection. The results of this study will open a new insight on the potential of foam, especially polymer-enhanced foam, for oil recovery of those reservoirs with viscous oil.http://www.mdpi.com/2504-5377/2/3/38CO2 foamEORheavy oilSAGpolymer-enhanced foam
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ali Telmadarreie
Japan J. Trivedi
spellingShingle Ali Telmadarreie
Japan J. Trivedi
Static and Dynamic Performance of Wet Foam and Polymer-Enhanced Foam in the Presence of Heavy Oil
Colloids and Interfaces
CO2 foam
EOR
heavy oil
SAG
polymer-enhanced foam
author_facet Ali Telmadarreie
Japan J. Trivedi
author_sort Ali Telmadarreie
title Static and Dynamic Performance of Wet Foam and Polymer-Enhanced Foam in the Presence of Heavy Oil
title_short Static and Dynamic Performance of Wet Foam and Polymer-Enhanced Foam in the Presence of Heavy Oil
title_full Static and Dynamic Performance of Wet Foam and Polymer-Enhanced Foam in the Presence of Heavy Oil
title_fullStr Static and Dynamic Performance of Wet Foam and Polymer-Enhanced Foam in the Presence of Heavy Oil
title_full_unstemmed Static and Dynamic Performance of Wet Foam and Polymer-Enhanced Foam in the Presence of Heavy Oil
title_sort static and dynamic performance of wet foam and polymer-enhanced foam in the presence of heavy oil
publisher MDPI AG
series Colloids and Interfaces
issn 2504-5377
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Inadequate sweep efficiency is one of the main concerns in conventional heavy oil recovery processes. Alternative processes are therefore needed to increase heavy oil sweep efficiency. Foam injection has gained interest in conventional oil recovery in recent times as it can control the mobility ratio and improve the sweep efficiency over chemical or gas flooding. However, most of the studies have focused on light crude oil. This study aims to investigate the static and dynamic performances of foam and polymer-enhanced foam (PEF) in the presence of heavy oil. Static and dynamic experiments were conducted to investigate the potential of foam and PEF for heavy oil recovery. Static analysis included foam/PEF stability, decay profile, and image analysis. A linear visual sand pack was used to visualize the performance of CO2 foam and CO2 PEF in porous media (dynamic experiments). Nonionic, anionic, and cationic surfactants were used as the foaming agents. Static stability results showed that the anionic surfactant generated relatively more stable foam, even in the presence of heavy oil. Slower liquid drainage and collapse rates for PEF compared to that of foam were the key observations through foam static analyses. Besides improving heavy oil recovery, the addition of polymer accelerated foam generation and propagation in porous media saturated with heavy oil. Visual analysis demonstrated more stable frontal displacement and higher sweep efficiency of PEF compared to conventional foam flooding. Unlike foam injection, lesser channeling (foam collapse) was observed during PEF injection. The results of this study will open a new insight on the potential of foam, especially polymer-enhanced foam, for oil recovery of those reservoirs with viscous oil.
topic CO2 foam
EOR
heavy oil
SAG
polymer-enhanced foam
url http://www.mdpi.com/2504-5377/2/3/38
work_keys_str_mv AT alitelmadarreie staticanddynamicperformanceofwetfoamandpolymerenhancedfoaminthepresenceofheavyoil
AT japanjtrivedi staticanddynamicperformanceofwetfoamandpolymerenhancedfoaminthepresenceofheavyoil
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