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Pore-scale simulation of wettability and interfacial tension effects on flooding process for enhanced oil recovery.

Authors :
Zhao J
Wen D
Source :
RSC advances [RSC Adv] 2017 Aug 27; Vol. 7 (66), pp. 41391-41398. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Aug 24.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

For enhanced oil recovery (EOR) applications, the oil/water flow characteristics during the flooding process was numerically investigated with the volume-of-fluid method at the pore scale. A two-dimensional pore throat-body connecting structure was established, and four scenarios were simulated in this paper. For oil-saturated pores, the wettability effect on the flooding process was studied; for oil-unsaturated pores, three effects were modelled to investigate the oil/water phase flow behaviors, namely the wettability effect, the interfacial tension (IFT) effect, and the combined wettability/IFT effect. The results show that oil saturated pores with the water-wet state can lead to 25-40% more oil recovery than with the oil-wet state, and the remaining oil mainly stays in the near wall region of the pore bodies for oil-wet saturated pores. For oil-unsaturated pores, the wettability effects on the flooding process can help oil to detach from the pore walls. By decreasing the oil/water interfacial tension and altering the wettability from oil-wet to water-wet state, the remaining oil recovery rate can be enhanced successfully. The wettability-IFT combined effect shows better EOR potential compared with decreasing the interfacial tension alone under the oil-wet condition. The simulation results in this work are consistent with previous experimental and molecular dynamics simulation conclusions. The combination effect of the IFT reducation and wettability alteration can become an important recovery mechanism in future studies for nanoparticles, surfactant, and nanoparticle-surfactant hybrid flooding process.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2046-2069
Volume :
7
Issue :
66
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
RSC advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29308190
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c7ra07325a