Literature Review of Hybrid CO2 Low Salinity Water-Alternating-Gas Injection and Investigation on Hysteresis Effect
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Bibliometric Study
2.1. Identification and Filtering
2.2. Discussion of Relevant Literature
- CO2 WAG injection
- ❖
- Miscible and immiscible process
- ❖
- Hysteresis effect
- LSWI
- ❖
- Mechanisms in sandstone
- ❖
- Mechanisms in carbonate
- CO2 LSWAG injection
- ❖
- Experimental studies and effect of different parameters
- ○
- Miscibility
- ○
- CO2 solubility
- ○
- Brine salinity and composition
- ○
- Rock composition
- ○
- WAG parameters
- ○
- Wettability
- ○
- Pressure and temperature
- ❖
- Simulation studies
- ○
- Core scale
- ○
- Field scale
3. CO2 WAG Injection
3.1. Miscible Process
3.2. Immiscible Process
3.3. Hysteresis
4. Low Salinity Water Injection (LSWI)
4.1. Proposed Mechanism of LSWI in Sandstone
4.2. Proposed Mechanism of LSWI in Carbonate
5. CO2 LSWAG Injection
5.1. Laboratory Observations of CO2 LSWAG Injection
5.1.1. Effect of Miscibility
5.1.2. Effect of CO2 Solubility in Brine
5.1.3. Effect of Brine Composition and Salinity
5.1.4. Effect of Rock Composition
5.1.5. Effect of WAG Parameters
5.1.6. Effect of Wettability
5.1.7. Effect of Pressure and Temperature
5.2. Simulation Studies of CO2 LSWAG Injection
5.3. Proposed Mechanisms of CO2 LSWAG Injection
5.4. Working Conditions and Screening Criteria for CO2 LSWAG Injection
5.5. Research Gap
5.6. Environmental Aspects of CO2
6. Simulation Investigation on Hysteresis Effect
6.1. Modeling of CO2 LSWAG Injection and Hysteresis Effect
6.1.1. Hysteresis Modeling
6.1.2. Core-Scale Model and LSWI Description
6.1.3. Modeling Investigation Approach
6.2. Results and Discussion
6.2.1. Effect of Hysteresis Model on Oil Recovery
6.2.2. Effect of Salinity
7. Conclusions
- The EOR potential of CO2 LSWAG injection has been confirmed by laboratory experiments and simulation studies. Initial wettability, the composition and salinity of injection and formation brine, WAG parameters, and reservoir pressure and temperature determine the success of this method;
- Laboratory experiments suggest that mobility control and wettability alteration (towards more water-wet) could be the dominant mechanisms for CO2 LSWAG injection;
- Clay content might not be an essential requirement for EOR using CO2 LSWAG injection as EOR potential has been observed with core samples with no clay content and core samples with less than 0.5% or 2–6% clay have reported both oil recovery increase or no oil recovery increase. This could be because the low salinity effect in a CO2 LSWAG injection differs from LSWI alone. In a CO2 LSWAG injection, low salinity effect could be similar to a LSWI, or similar to carbonated water injection as lower salinity leads to higher CO2 solubility in water, resulting in in situ carbonated water effect for increased oil recovery.
- Simulation studies proposed two effects for CO2 LSWAG injection. One is that LSWI could potentially compensate for the delayed production by CO2 WAG injection in the early stage, and the injection of CO2 promotes ion exchange and geochemical reactions for LSWI due to its reaction with water and calcite minerals. The other one is that fines migration, and subsequent water blockage induced by fines plugging, divert the flow path to unswept low permeability zones. Due to the lack of experimental evidence, more laboratory experiments, especially pore-scale studies, are recommended to investigate the driving forces and mechanisms for improved oil recovery by CO2 LSWAG injection;
- There is no consensus as to which mechanisms are dominant in improving oil recovery during LSWI, and limited research on the interactions between CO2, crude oil, brine and reservoir rocks. Hence, extensive laboratory studies and simulations on a field scale should be conducted prior to any field-scale application of CO2 LSWAG injection;
- Development of a more reliable CO2 LSWAG injection model is necessary, considering geochemical interactions of the crude oil/brine/rock, three-phase relative permeability, capillary pressure, and hysteresis effect;
- Further investigations are required to thoroughly understand the effect of interactions between crude oil, low salinity water, rock minerals and CO2 on wettability modification during CO2 LSWAG injection;
- Despite the existing challenges, this hybrid technique has the potential to improve oil recovery at low cost in both offshore and onshore reservoirs with ongoing or planned water flooding and CO2 WAG injection projects; and
- Our simulation investigation on the hysteresis effect indicates that it is more accurate to include hysteresis in CO2 LSWAG injection modeling and optimization. In our study with respect salinity effect on oil recovery considering hysteresis, higher oil recovery is obtained with salinity of 5000 ppm instead of 2000 ppm, indicating that lower salinity in a CO2 LSWAG injection with hysteresis effect considered might not lead to higher oil recovery. Even though the hysteresis effect is not significant at core scale, excluding it at reservoir scale might lead to large errors in oil recovery prediction as well as operational parameters and salinity optimization. Moreover, more laboratory data with respect to the imbibition and drainage curves considering different salinities is also required to better model the CO2 LSWAG injection process.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
Acronyms | |
API | American Petroleum Institute |
BHP | Bottom hole pressure |
Ca2+ | Calcium ion |
CaCl2 | Calcium chloride |
Cl− | Chloride ion |
CMG | Computer Modeling Group |
CO2 | Carbon dioxide |
COBR | Crude-oil/brine/rock |
DECE | Designed exploration-controlled evolution |
EOR | Enhanced Oil Recovery |
GA | Genetic algorithm |
HCO3− | Bicarbonate ion |
H2CO3 | Carbonic acid |
HS | High salinity |
HSW | High salinity water |
IFT | Interfacial tension |
LPG | Liquified petroleum gases |
LS | Low salinity |
LSE | Low salinity effect |
LSW | Low salinity water |
LSWAG | Low salinity water-alternating-gas |
LSWI | Low salinity water injection |
K+ | Potassium ion |
KCl | Potassium chloride |
Krg | Gas relative permeability |
Na+ | Sodium ion |
NaCl | Sodium chloride |
Na2SO4 | Sodium sulfate |
md | Milli Darcy |
Mg2+ | Magnesium ion |
MgCl2 | Magnesium chloride |
MIE | Multi-component ionic exchange |
MMP | Minimum miscible pressure |
MSW | Modified seawater |
NPV | Net present value |
OOIP | Original oil in place |
ppm | Parts per million |
PSO | Particle swarm optimization |
PV | Pore volume |
RSM | Response surface methodology |
Sg | Gas saturation |
Sgcrit | Critical gas saturation |
Sgf | Free gas saturation |
Sg,max | Maximum gas saturation at the flow reversal |
Sgr | Trapped gas saturation |
SO42− | Sulfate ion |
Sw | Water saturation |
TDS | Total dissolved solids |
UTCOMP | Compositional and multiphase flow simulator |
WAG | Water-alternating-gas |
WI | Wettability index |
0NaCl | Without NaCl |
0NaCl-d5Ca | Without NaCl and 5-time diluted Ca2+ |
0NaCl-d5Mg | Without NaCl and 5-time diluted Mg2+ |
0NaCl-d5SO4 | Without NaCl and 5-time diluted SO42− |
Variables and parameters | |
M | Mobility ratio |
V | Volume fraction |
Greek letters | |
ζ | Zeta potential |
λ | Mobility |
θ | Contact angle |
β | Coefficient |
ν | Velocity |
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Ref 1 | Rock Properties | Fluid Properties | Test Temp 6 [°C] | WAG Process | Total RF 13 [%] | CO2 LS WAG Injection Performance | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Type | Aging | Φ 2 [%] | K 3 [mD] | Oil | FB 4 [ppm] | IB 5 [ppm] | Type | Mode | Cycle | Slug [PV] | Ratio | |||||
[11] | Berea sandstone | 1.5 days @ 60 °C | 19.4–20.3 | 60.7–99.2 | Crude Oil 7.92 cp | 30,000 | 10,000–32,000 | 60 | MW 9 | T7 | 6 | 0.5 | 1:1 | 52–60 |
| |
[91] | Outcrop limestone (71.6% calcite) | No aging | 29 | 90 | Crude oil | 0 6000 20,000 | 0 6000 20,000 | 49 | MW | S 8 | N/A | 0.33 | 1:1 | 74–92 |
| |
[7] | Sandstone Kaolinite-free | 2 days @ 70 °C | 29–32 | 333–357 | Heavy oil 6.5% asphaltene 10.1 cp and 0.89 g/cm3 @ 96 °C | 50,000 | 1000 50,000 | 50 | LS 12-IMW HS 11-IMW | S | 5 | 0.16 | 1:1 | 74–92 |
| |
[9,92] | Berea Sandstone | 14 days @ 91°C | 12 | 0.63 | Crude oil 0.87 g/cm3 | 100,000 | 25,679 12,840 1027 | 91 | IMW 10 | S, T | S: LSWI T: Immiscible CO2 flooding | 81.5 |
| |||
[10] | Outcrop Grey Berea sandstone 6% Kaolinite and 2% Illite | No aging | 17.6–19.1 | 62–79 | Dead crude oil 0.82 g/cm3 | 174,156 | 54,680 5000 | 65 | MW | S | 3 | 2.6–8.2 | 1:1 | 61.7–64.6 |
| |
[93] | Reservoir carbonate | No aging | N/A 14 | N/A | Crude oil 3.08 cp and 0.85 g/cm3 @ 25 °C | 163,000 | 5000 | 121 | MW | S | 2 | 0.2 | 1:2 1:2 2:1 | 58–88 |
| |
[94] | Berea sandstone | No aging | 17–18.5 | 143–156 | Crude oil (Van Gogh) | 5000 | 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 | 71 | MW | S | 6 3 2 | 0.2 0.4 0.6 | 1:1 | 40–55 |
| |
[95] | Reservoir sandstone (with clay) | 1 day @ 80 °C | N/A | N/A | Crude oil 0.82 g/cm3 | 104,000 | 13,480 | 50 | IMW | S | 3 | 0.5 | 1:1 | 68 |
| |
[96] | Bentheimer sandstone (0.5% Kaolinite) Berea sandstone (2% Kaolinite) | No aging | 22.4–22.9 | 94–207 | Light crude oil 3.58 cp and 0.83 g/cm3 | 19,751 | 36,170 3360 | 60 | HS-MW LS-MW | T | N/A | 0.2 | 1:1 | 65.2–85.2 |
| |
[97] | Berea sandstone | No aging | 20.6–21.1 | 88.6–90.4 | Light Oil (Oman field) | 50,000 | 5000 (NaCl) 5000 (MgCl2) 5000 (KCl) | 60 | IMW | T | 3 | 0.5 | 1:1 | 45–55.4 |
| |
[98] | Reservoir sandstone | 35 days @ 90 °C | 14–17 | 1–5 | Crude oil (Bartlesville) 600 cp and 0.83 g/cm3 @ 25 °C | 104,000 | 51,400 5140 | 50 | MW | S, T |
| 30–90 |
| |||
[8] | Sandpack (6% Kaolinite) | No aging | 31.7–33.5 | 690–810 | Crude oil 5.1 cp and 0.85 g/cm3 @ 50 °C 2.7 cp and 0.83 g/cm3 @ 80 °C | 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 | 50 80 | S, T |
| 46–58 |
| |||||
[99] | Carbonate Calcite (52.8%) Dolomite (16.6%) | 28 days @ 90 °C | 18 | 26–30 | Crude oil 13 cp and 0.88 g/cm3 @ 22 °C | 183,700 | 13,090 1309 | 90 | IMW | T | N/A | 0.4 | 1:1 | 68.2 |
|
Experiment Title | Recovery %OOIP |
---|---|
WAG—immiscible (NaCl brine) | 8.3% |
WAG—miscible (NaCl brine) | 36.6% |
WAG—immiscible (Yates reservoir brine) | 9.9% |
WAG—miscible (Yates reservoir brine) | 25.4% |
Parameter | FB 1 Formation Brine | HSW 2 Seawater | LSW 3 |
---|---|---|---|
Calcium, mg/L | 28,035.05 | 522 | 51 |
Magnesium, mg/L | 5241.18 | 1624 | 140 |
Sodium, mg/L | 51,809.52 | 13,416 | 1220 |
Potassium, mg/L | - | 507 | 45 |
Chloride, mg/L | 112,365.25 | 23,321 | 2057 |
Total Alkalinity (as CaCO3) | - | 7993 | 707 |
Sulfate, mg/L | - | 3479 | 378 |
Nitrate, mg/L | - | <1 | <1 |
Fluoride, mg/L | - | 1.8 | 0.17 |
Total Dissolved Solids (TDS), mg/L | 197,451 | 36,170 | 3360 |
pH | 7.37 | 6.90 | 7.05 |
Density @ 60 °C & 14.7 psi | 1.038 | 1.021 | 0.993 |
Viscosity @ 60 °C & 14.7 psi | 1.031 | 0.863 | 0.657 |
Compound | FB 1 | SW 2 | SW −0NaCl 4 | MSW1 3 0NaCl-d5Ca 5 | MSW2 0NaCl-d5Mg 6 | MSW3 0NaCl-d5SO4 7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NaCl | 81,000 | 25,000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
CaCl2 | 17,000 | 2000 | 2000 | 400 | 2000 | 2000 |
MgCl2 | 5000 | 10,500 | 10,500 | 10,500 | 2100 | 10,500 |
Na2SO4 | - | 4900 | 4900 | 4900 | 4900 | 980 |
KCl | 1000 | - | - | - | - | - |
TDS | 104,000 | 43,400 | 18,400 | 15,800 | 9000 | 13,480 |
Flooding Sequence | Recovery %OOIP |
---|---|
2 PV SW | 43.64 |
2 PV SW, 5 PV CO2 | 47.64 |
2 PV SW, 3 PV SW-0NaCl, and 5 PVCO2 | 52.70 |
2 PV SW, 3 PV MSW1, and 5 PV CO2 | 63.45 |
2 PV SW, 3 PV MSW2, and 5 PV CO2 | 58.65 |
2 PV SW, 3 PV MSW3, and 5 PV CO2 | 55.83 |
2 PV SW, 3 PV MSW1/CO2 (3 cycles, 0.5 PV slug size) | 68.14 |
Rock Type | Description of Experiment | Total Recovery %OOIP |
---|---|---|
Berea Sandstone | CO2 HS WAG Injection | 65.20 |
CO2 LS WAG Injection | 82.40 | |
Bentheimer Sandstone | CO2 HS WAG Injection | 85.18 |
CO2 LS WAG Injection | 72.65 |
Condition A | Core disc was aged for three weeks at reservoir temperature Seawater is between the disc and oil-droplet during contact angle measurement |
Condition B | Aged disc was kept in a piston with seawater and CO2 for 2 days Seawater and CO2 is between the disc and oil-droplet during contact angle measurement |
Condition C | Aged disc was kept in a piston with low salinity water and CO2 Low salinity water and CO2 is between the disc and oil-droplet during contact angle measurement |
Sample No. | Brine | WI | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | HS 1 (50,000 ppm) | 51.24 | 118.19 | 71.43 | 0.70 |
2 | HS (50,000 ppm)—CO2 | 51.24 | 114.33 | 42.12 | 1.14 |
3 | NaCl (5000 ppm) | 51.24 | 133.85 | 36.44 | 1.18 |
4 | NaCl (5000 ppm)—CO2 | 51.24 | 118.78 | 33.34 | 1.27 |
5 | KCl (5000 ppm) | 51.24 | 109.45 | 41.95 | 1.16 |
6 | KCl (5000 ppm)—CO2 | 51.24 | 122.33 | 43.58 | 1.11 |
7 | MgCl2 (5000 ppm) | 51.24 | 126.21 | 52.37 | 0.98 |
8 | MgCl2 (5000 ppm)—CO2 | 51.24 | 101.23 | 35.26 | 1.32 |
Potential for Enhanced Oil Recovery | Initial Wettability | ||
---|---|---|---|
Water-Wet | Intermediate-Wet to Oil-Wet | ||
Clay Content | No Clay | 1 reviewed article indicates EOR potential [7] | / |
<0.5% Clay | 2 reviewed articles indicate EOR potential [95,97] 2 reviewed articles indicate no EOR potential [11,96] | 2 reviewed articles indicate EOR potential [9,98] | |
2–6% Clay | 2 reviewed articles indicate EOR potential [8,96] 1 reviewed article indicates no EOR potential [10] | / |
Parameter | Value |
---|---|
Grid block system | 100 × 1 × 1 |
Grid block sizes | ∆x = 0.312 cm, ∆y = 3.345 cm, ∆z = 3.345 cm |
Porosity | 17 × 0.1845, 17 × 0.1845, 17 × 0.1859, 17 × 0.1862, 17 × 0.1835, 15 × 0.1846 |
Permeability (mD) | 17 × 2412, 17 × 2235, 17 × 2280, 17 × 2285, 17 × 2180, 15 × 2240 |
Initial water saturation | 0.03 |
Reservoir temperature | 100 °C |
Initial reservoir pressure | 42,446 kPa (6156 psi) |
Injection rate | 11 cm3/h |
WAG ratio | 1:1 |
Total pore volume injected | 2 |
Equation of state | Soave-Redlich-Kwong |
Bubble point | 37,335 kPa (5414 psi) |
Oil API gravity | 32 |
Formation volume factor | 1.68 rm3/sm3 |
Component | Formation Water | Seawater | Low Salinity Water |
---|---|---|---|
Na+, mg/L | 35,671 | 10,974 | 614 |
Mg2+, mg/L | 330 | 1310 | 73 |
Ca2+, mg/L | 3599 | 420 | 23 |
K+, mg/L | 225 | 407 | 23 |
Cl−, mg/L | 62,371 | 19,740 | 1104 |
SO42−, mg/L | 233 | 2766 | 155 |
HCO3−, mg/L | - | 129 | 7 |
Total | 102,430 | 35,746 | 2000 |
Case | Recovery Scheme | Hysteresis Model | Land Parameter | Gas Reduction Factor | Recovery Factor | % Difference from Base Case |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | CO2 WAG | None | N/A | N/A | 85.4% | Base 1 |
#2 | 2 Phase | 0.8 | N/A | 85.4% | 0% | |
#3 | 3 Phase | 0.8 | 3.32 | 85.7% | 0.35% | |
#4 | CO2 LS WAG | None | N/A | N/A | 86.6% | Base 2 |
#5 | 2 Phase | 0.8 | N/A | 86.1% | −0.8% | |
#6 | 3 Phase | 0.8 | 3.32 | 86.1% | −0.8% |
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Ma, S.; James, L.A. Literature Review of Hybrid CO2 Low Salinity Water-Alternating-Gas Injection and Investigation on Hysteresis Effect. Energies 2022, 15, 7891. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15217891
Ma S, James LA. Literature Review of Hybrid CO2 Low Salinity Water-Alternating-Gas Injection and Investigation on Hysteresis Effect. Energies. 2022; 15(21):7891. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15217891
Chicago/Turabian StyleMa, Shijia, and Lesley A. James. 2022. "Literature Review of Hybrid CO2 Low Salinity Water-Alternating-Gas Injection and Investigation on Hysteresis Effect" Energies 15, no. 21: 7891. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15217891
APA StyleMa, S., & James, L. A. (2022). Literature Review of Hybrid CO2 Low Salinity Water-Alternating-Gas Injection and Investigation on Hysteresis Effect. Energies, 15(21), 7891. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15217891