LAPSE:2023.34575
Published Article
LAPSE:2023.34575
Geochemical Investigation of CO2 Injection in Oil and Gas Reservoirs of Middle East to Estimate the Formation Damage and Related Oil Recovery
Ilyas Khurshid, Imran Afgan
April 27, 2023
Abstract
The injection performance of carbon dioxide (CO2) for oil recovery depends upon its injection capability and the actual injection rate. The CO2−rock−water interaction could cause severe formation damage by plugging the reservoir pores and reducing the permeability of the reservoir. In this study, a simulator was developed to model the reactivity of injected CO2 at various reservoir depths, under different temperature and pressure conditions. Through the estimation of location and magnitude of the chemical reactions, the simulator is able to predict the effects of change in the reservoir porosity, permeability (due to the formation/dissolution) and transport/deposition of dissoluted particles. The paper also presents the effect of asphaltene on the shift of relative permeability curve and the related oil recovery. Finally, the effect of CO2 injection rate is analyzed to demonstrate the effect of CO2 miscibility on oil recovery from a reservoir. The developed model is validated against the experimental data. The predicted results show that the reservoir temperature, its depth, concentration of asphaltene and rock properties have a significant effect on formation/dissolution and precipitation during CO2 injection. Results showed that deep oil and gas reservoirs are good candidates for CO2 sequestration compared to shallow reservoirs, due to increased temperatures that reduce the dissolution rate and lower the solid precipitation. However, asphaltene deposition reduced the oil recovery by 10%. Moreover, the sensitivity analysis of CO2 injection rates was performed to identify the effect of CO2 injection rate on reduced permeability in deep and high-temperature formations. It was found that increased CO2 injection rates and pressures enable us to reach miscibility pressure. Once this pressure is reached, there are less benefits of injecting CO2 at a higher rate for better pressure maintenance and no further diminution of residual oil.
Keywords
CO2 sequestration, formation damage, geochemical reactions, oil recovery
Suggested Citation
Khurshid I, Afgan I. Geochemical Investigation of CO2 Injection in Oil and Gas Reservoirs of Middle East to Estimate the Formation Damage and Related Oil Recovery. (2023). LAPSE:2023.34575
Author Affiliations
Khurshid I: Department of Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, Khalifa University, Abu Dhabi P.O. Box 12277, United Arab Emirates
Afgan I: Department of Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, Khalifa University, Abu Dhabi P.O. Box 12277, United Arab Emirates; Department of MACE, School of Engineering, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, UK [ORCID]
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
14
Issue
22
First Page
7676
Year
2021
Publication Date
2021-11-16
ISSN
1996-1073
Version Comments
Original Submission
Other Meta
PII: en14227676, Publication Type: Journal Article
Record Map
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.34575
This Record
External Link

https://doi.org/10.3390/en14227676
Publisher Version
Download
Files
Apr 27, 2023
Main Article
License
CC BY 4.0
Meta
Record Statistics
Record Views
175
Version History
[v1] (Original Submission)
Apr 27, 2023
 
Verified by curator on
Apr 27, 2023
This Version Number
v1
Citations
Most Recent
This Version
URL Here
https://psecommunity.org/LAPSE:2023.34575
 
Record Owner
Auto Uploader for LAPSE
Links to Related Works
Directly Related to This Work
Publisher Version