Chapter 01 Introduction - Poster
Chapter 01 Introduction - Poster
Primary
Recovery
Artificial Lift
Natural Flow
Pump - Gas Lift - Etc.
Conventional
Recovery
Secondary
Recovery
Pressure
Waterflood Maintenance
Water - Gas Reinjection
Tertiary
Recovery
Thermal Chemical Enhanced
Recovery
Solvent Other
– Environment friendly.
Main sources of Injection water
1. Shallow aquifers, particularly if their waters cannot be used
for domestic or agricultural consumption
– Composition
– Amounts of dissolved salts
– Formation fines
– Precipitation products
– Corrosion products
– Bacteria / algae products
2. Surface water from a lake, river, or sea
– Composition
– Amounts of dissolved salts
– Amount of dissolved gases
i. Oxygen
ii. Carbon dioxide
iii. Hydrogen sulfide
– Quantity and nature of suspended solids
Main sources of Injection water
3. Produced water
– Composition
– Amounts of oil in suspension
– Dissolved solids
Waterflood Performance Measurements
• Steamflooding
• Cyclic steam stimulation
• In situ combustion
GAS MISCIBLE RECOVERY
• Miscible Recovery
• Carbon Dioxide Flooding
• Cyclic Carbon Dioxide Stimulation
• Nitrogen Flooding
• Nitrogen CO2 Flooding
Chemicals Recovery Methods
• Chemical recovery methods include
–Conformance Control
–polymer,
–micellar-polymer and
–alkaline flooding.
Conformance Control
Problem: Oil recovery from low K layers is hampered because the main water flows
through the high K layer. (more than 60% remaining oil is still remained in unswept area)
Objective: Inject blocking agents to block/reduce water flow in high permeability zone.
Methods: Gel treatment is the principle method to control conformance for water
flood reservoirs.
MEOR
• Microbial Flooding
• Cyclic Microbial Recovery
Microbial Products & Their Contribution
to EOR
EOR Potential in the World
The Four Key Issues to be Resolved
to Maximize Oil Recovery
Micelle and CMC
• A micelle is an aggregate of surfactant molecules dispersed in a liquid
colloid. A typical micelle in aqueous solution forms an aggregate with the
hydrophilic "head" regions in contact with surrounding solvent,
sequestering the hydrophobic single tail regions in the micelle centre.