LAPSE:2023.29407
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.29407
Role of Monovalent and Divalent Ions in Low-Salinity Water Flood in Carbonate Reservoirs: An Integrated Analysis through Zeta Potentiometric and Simulation Studies
April 13, 2023
Abstract
The presence of principal ions in the water injected is essential for enhanced oil recovery by formation of water-wet state in carbonates. This study reaffirms this and presents an evaluation of the positive influence of both divalent as wells as monovalent ions on wettability alteration mechanisms during low salinity waterflooding using brines of varying ionic composition, referred to as “smart brines”. Zeta potentiometric analysis and reservoir simulation studies were conducted with diluted and smart brines that were prepared by varying the composition of principal ions. Surface charge of oil-saturated whole core samples of rock in the presence of various diluted and smart brines was estimated by zeta potential measurements. A comprehensive analysis of zeta potentiometric and reservoir simulation studies was done to establish and investigate the linkage between the recovery mechanism and the incremental recovery achieved. It is noted that zeta potential increases with the increasing level of dilution and it can be attributed to electric double-layer mechanism. On the contrary, simulation studies implied a different mechanism where an increase in effluent’s pH and Ca2+ mole fraction along with decrease in moles of minerals and saturation index implied rock dissolution was dominant mechanism. Moreover, the effect of mineral dissolution beyond the injection block is highly doubtful. This study demonstrates that an integrated approach from both zeta potentiometric and simulation studies can be used to provide insights into the underlying science of interactions at pore scale during a low salinity waterflood using smart brines. With the aid of an adequately designed upscaling procedure and protocol, the laboratory results can be further used towards developing field-scale models to obtain with realistic recovery factors with optimized brine composition and salinity.
The presence of principal ions in the water injected is essential for enhanced oil recovery by formation of water-wet state in carbonates. This study reaffirms this and presents an evaluation of the positive influence of both divalent as wells as monovalent ions on wettability alteration mechanisms during low salinity waterflooding using brines of varying ionic composition, referred to as “smart brines”. Zeta potentiometric analysis and reservoir simulation studies were conducted with diluted and smart brines that were prepared by varying the composition of principal ions. Surface charge of oil-saturated whole core samples of rock in the presence of various diluted and smart brines was estimated by zeta potential measurements. A comprehensive analysis of zeta potentiometric and reservoir simulation studies was done to establish and investigate the linkage between the recovery mechanism and the incremental recovery achieved. It is noted that zeta potential increases with the increasing level of dilution and it can be attributed to electric double-layer mechanism. On the contrary, simulation studies implied a different mechanism where an increase in effluent’s pH and Ca2+ mole fraction along with decrease in moles of minerals and saturation index implied rock dissolution was dominant mechanism. Moreover, the effect of mineral dissolution beyond the injection block is highly doubtful. This study demonstrates that an integrated approach from both zeta potentiometric and simulation studies can be used to provide insights into the underlying science of interactions at pore scale during a low salinity waterflood using smart brines. With the aid of an adequately designed upscaling procedure and protocol, the laboratory results can be further used towards developing field-scale models to obtain with realistic recovery factors with optimized brine composition and salinity.
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Keywords
carbonates, electric double layer, low-salinity water flood, Potential Determining Ions, reservoir simulation, zeta potential
Subject
Suggested Citation
Gopani PH, Singh N, Sarma HK, Mattey P, Srivastava VR. Role of Monovalent and Divalent Ions in Low-Salinity Water Flood in Carbonate Reservoirs: An Integrated Analysis through Zeta Potentiometric and Simulation Studies. (2023). LAPSE:2023.29407
Author Affiliations
Gopani PH: Chemical and Petroleum Engineering Department, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada [ORCID]
Singh N: Chemical and Petroleum Engineering Department, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
Sarma HK: Chemical and Petroleum Engineering Department, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
Mattey P: Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd., Ahmedabad 380005, India
Srivastava VR: Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd., Ahmedabad 380005, India [ORCID]
Singh N: Chemical and Petroleum Engineering Department, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
Sarma HK: Chemical and Petroleum Engineering Department, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
Mattey P: Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd., Ahmedabad 380005, India
Srivastava VR: Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd., Ahmedabad 380005, India [ORCID]
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
14
Issue
3
First Page
729
Year
2021
Publication Date
2021-01-30
ISSN
1996-1073
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Original Submission
Other Meta
PII: en14030729, Publication Type: Journal Article
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LAPSE:2023.29407
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https://doi.org/10.3390/en14030729
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