A calibrated surface complexation model for carbonate-oil-brine interactions coupled with reservoir simulation- application to controlled salinity water flooding

Lawrence Opoku Boampong, Roozbeh Rafati* (Corresponding Author), Amin Sharifi Haddad

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)
7 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Vast majority of past studies that have been conducted on controlled salinity water flooding (CSWF) use diffuse layer model (DLM) that calculates only the surface potential, which can be significantly different from the ζ-potential of the interface. Importantly, stability of the water-film (between the oil and the rock surface) which dictates ultimate oil recovery is related to ζ-potential. As such, using DLM calculated surface potential (directly) for CSWF can be misleading. Additionally, most of the existing DLMs use integer charges instead of fractional charges to model carbonate-brine interactions, which may not represent the actual carbonate crystallographic. We present a triple layer surface complexation model (TLM) which offers the option to locate and distribute charge of the adsorbing ion(s) at three locations. TLM can therefore calculate potentials at three different locations within the Stern layer. To the best of our knowledge, only few authors have used TLM to simulate CSWF. However, some surface reactions were ignored in these models. For instance, adsorption of monovalent ions such as Na+ and Cl18 ions was ignored in some of the few available TLMs. Also, the effect of basic-oil components was not considered in some TLMs, and lastly, some TLMs used integer charges for the carbonate surface group. This study introduced a comprehensive TLM that includes all these complexities. Moreover, we introduced a new wettability indicator (WI) that is related to the electrostatic forces between the oil-brine and the rock-brine interfaces. That is, WI was calculated from ζ-potentials at the oil-brine and rock-brine interfaces. The TLM, built in a geochemical simulator, PHREEQC, was then coupled with UTCHEM, a multiphase reservoir simulator. The developed simulator based on the TLM-CSWF model was tested against several experimentally measured oil recovery data sets. Results of the model suggest that Oil basic component significantly impacts oil-brine interface ζ-potential irrespective of temperature, brine composition, and ionic strength. On the otherhand, Na+ions in brine may influence oil-brine ζ-potential, and this relates to temperature, brine composition, and ionic strength. The results further suggest that injection of (sulfate-free) diluted brine in chalk resulted to increased oil adhesion, shifting the reservoir to oil-wet condition. Hence, no additional oil is recovered with this brine injected at tertiary oil recovery stage. Finally, the results showed that wettability is related to ζ-potentials at the oil-brine and rock-brine interfaces, and the carbonate rock would be strongly oil-wet or water-wet only at significantly large magnitude of ζ-potentials at the interfaces
Original languageEnglish
Article number109314
Number of pages22
JournalJournal of Petroleum Science and Engineering
Volume208
Issue numberPart A
Early online date9 Aug 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2022

Bibliographical note

Acknowledgments

Authors would like to thank the School of Engineering at the University of Aberdeen for providing required consumables and facilities to complete this research. We also thank Ghana Education Trust Fund (GetFund) for their financial support. The authors would also like to thank Dr Jan Vinogradov at the School of Engineering, University of Aberdeen, for his technical advice.

Keywords

  • Low salinity water flooding
  • Disjoining pressure
  • Electrical double layer
  • Wettability alteration
  • Zeta potential
  • Controlled salinity water flooding

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A calibrated surface complexation model for carbonate-oil-brine interactions coupled with reservoir simulation- application to controlled salinity water flooding'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this