Surfactant-EOR in tight oil reservoirs: Current status and a systematic surfactant screening method with field experiments

2021 
Abstract: Tight oil reservoirs typically have an estimated ultimate recovery of less than 10% after hydraulic fracturing, where enhanced oil recovery (EOR) technique is needed. Comparing to the gas-EOR, the surfactant-EOR neither alters the current fracturing procedure nor requires special injection facilities, and thus can be economically-viable under the current environment of low oil prices. However, tight rocks have small pores and large specific surface areas, which can make the adsorption rate of surfactants significant and thus limit the penetration depth of surfactants and its enhancement on oil recovery. In the published studies on the surfactant-EOR for shales and other tight reservoirs, this key parameter is only measured with the crushed rock samples, which can be underestimated comparing to that in the intact rock. Moreover, the dispersion coefficient that determines the penetration speed of a surfactant has never been directly measured in the tight rock, and the potential interaction between the surfactant and the friction reducer has neither been studied. In this study, a new form of surfactants is introduced, in which the wettability-alteration surfactants are firstly synthesized into oil-in-water microemulsions and then diluted to a designed concentration in the fracturing fluid. The thermodynamically-stable structure of microemulsion can minimize the adsorption rate of surfactants when transporting in the tight rock. Using coreflood experiments with UV-vis spectroscopy, the adsorption rate and dispersion coefficient of this form of surfactants are directly measured in tight rocks with a range of permeabilities, which are key parameters to modeling the EOR process and further scaling up laboratory findings for designing a field operation. To ensure the success of the surfactant-EOR technique in the field, the chosen surfactant needs to pass the preliminary screening including the aqueous stability test, the emulsion tendency test, the oil-water IFT measurement, and the shearing test; besides, it is also crucial to examine the compatibility between the slickwater and the wettability-alteration surfactant with different electric charges, which is seldom reported yet. In the end, the chosen surfactant is tested in two pairs of horizontal wells on one pad site, whose flowback water is collected and analyzed for better understanding the behavior of this surfactant.
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