Indah Widiyaningsih
UPN Veteran Yogyakarta

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Optimization of CO2 Injection Through Cyclic Huff and Puff to Improve Oil Recovery Dedi Kristanto; Hariyadi Hariyadi; Eko Widi Pramudyohadi; Aditya Kurniawan; Unggul Setiadi Nursidik; Dewi Asmorowati; Indah Widiyaningsih; Ndaru Cahyaningtyas
Scientific Contributions Oil and Gas Vol 48 No 2 (2025)
Publisher : Testing Center for Oil and Gas LEMIGAS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.29017/scog.v48i2.1659

Abstract

One of the Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) strategies in the petroleum industry is CO2 injection using the huff and puff method. The method is performed on one well that acts as an injection and a production well. The method works by injecting a certain volume of carbon dioxide (CO2) gas into the reservoir and then closing the well for a period of time. This injection cycle can take place over several cycles. Production can be carried out after one or more cycles according to the design. In this study, CO2 injection optimization with the huff and puff method is carried out with reservoir simulation (GEM-CMG) by taking data from one of the oil and gas wells in Indonesia, with carbonate rock characteristics that are water wet. The simulation work steps include inputting data (fluid, rock properties, and production), initialization, history matching, and CO2 injection optimization with the huff and puff method. The optimization scenarios include optimization of injection pressure and number of cycles. The injection pressure scenario uses a range of 500 - 3000 psi, based on the simulation results obtained that the injection pressure of 500 psi produces the highest recovery factor (RF) of 22.2%. Then, the cyclic scenario was carried out at the optimum injection pressure (500 psi) with the number of cycles 2 - 6 cycles. From the simulation results, it is found that the number of cycles for this carbonate reservoir condition does not have a significant effect, as evidenced by the RF values ranging from 22.1 - 22.3%.
Impact of Rhamnolipid Biosurfactants on Chemical Composition, Rheology, and Imbibition Performance of Crude Oils Harry Budiharjo Sulistyarso; Indah Widiyaningsih; Yulius Deddy Hermawan; Joko Pamungkas; Sayoga Heru Prayitno
Scientific Contributions Oil and Gas Vol 48 No 3 (2025)
Publisher : Testing Center for Oil and Gas LEMIGAS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.29017/scog.v48i3.1859

Abstract

The application of biosurfactants in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) has generated significant interest owing to their biodegradability, low toxicity, and effectiveness in modifying oil–rock–brine interactions. Rhamnolipids—glycolipid biosurfactants synthesized by bacterial species—exhibit a distinctive amphiphilic structure that can alter the characteristics of crude oil at both molecular and macroscopic levels. This study offers a novel integrative evaluation of rhamnolipid-induced alterations in chemical composition, rheological properties, and imbibition efficacy of medium and light crude oils. The study utilizes gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) to clarify compositional changes in hydrocarbon fractions, viscosity assessments to measure rheological alterations in oil-biosurfactant mixtures, IFT measurements, and spontaneous imbibition experiments to analyze wettability changes and recovery efficacy. This study simultaneously examines compositional, viscosity, IFT, and capillarity-driven displacement mechanisms across two distinct crude oil categories, contrasting with prior research that focused solely on either compositional or interfacial properties within a single crude oil type, thereby offering comparative insights into biosurfactant–hydrocarbon interactions. The results are anticipated to enhance comprehension of biosurfactant-mediated enhanced oil recovery mechanisms, refine rhamnolipid application methodologies, and connect molecular-level alterations with core-scale oil recovery efficacy. This integrated method provides a novel framework for customizing biosurfactant formulations to particular crude oil varieties, thus improving recovery while preserving environmental sustainability.