Scientific Contributions Oil and Gas
Vol 40 No 3 (2017)

A LABORATORY STUDY OF CLAY SWELLING PROBLEM IN CO2 EOR BY CARBONIC ACID INJECTION IN CLAY SANDSTONE

sugeng riyono (”LEMIGAS” Research and Development Centre for Oil and Gas Technology)
Aditya Pramada Wicaksono (OGRINDO Research onsortium, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Petrol. Eng. Bldg, Level 2, 3Petroleum Engineering Study Program, Institut Teknologi Bandung)
Lutfi Andhika (OGRINDO Research onsortium, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Petrol. Eng. Bldg, Level 2, 3Petroleum Engineering Study Program, Institut Teknologi Bandung)
Iqbal Fauzi (OGRINDO Research onsortium, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Petrol. Eng. Bldg, Level 2, 3Petroleum Engineering Study Program, Institut Teknologi Bandung)
Billal Maydika Aslam (OGRINDO Research onsortium, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Petrol. Eng. Bldg, Level 2, 3Petroleum Engineering Study Program, Institut Teknologi Bandung)
Rafael Purba (OGRINDO Research onsortium, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Petrol. Eng. Bldg, Level 2, 3Petroleum Engineering Study Program, Institut Teknologi Bandung)
Handita Reksi (OGRINDO Research onsortium, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Petrol. Eng. Bldg, Level 2, 3Petroleum Engineering Study Program, Institut Teknologi Bandung)
Hasian P. Septoratno Siregar (OGRINDO Research onsortium, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Petrol. Eng. Bldg, Level 2, 3Petroleum Engineering Study Program, Institut Teknologi Bandung)



Article Info

Publish Date
24 Sep 2018

Abstract

Signifi cant portion of CO2 is dissolved in reservoir brine during CO2-Enhanced Oil Recovery. Dissolved CO2 forms an acidic environment which could modify rock-fluid interaction. One of the phenomena that could happen due to this interaction is clay swelling which may affect enhanced oil recovery performance. Several experiments were conducted in a number of sandstone core samples, i.e. Imbibition test, Core flood test, Conductivity test, and pH measurement. Imbibition test was conducted to evaluate CO2-saturated brine (approached with carbonic acid) performance toward oil recovery during five days measurement compared with brine imbibition performance. Moreover, core flood experiment was run to determine the effect of dissolved CO2 in brine on injection in sandstone. This is simulated by injecting brine (base case) followed by carbonic acid under 68.3OC. Thus, conductivity and pH of the imbibed fluids (before & after running imbibition test) were measured to justify occurrence of cation exchange. Interpretation of imbibition test indicated that imbibing carbonic acid, at pH value of about four, resulted in loss of oil recovery about 15% compared with brine due to formation damage, caused by clay swelling as sandstone contains clay. The existence of this phenomenon was confirmed by flow resistance at low pH in core sample which was higher than that in brine. This apparent plugging was expected due to severe clay swelling. Meanwhile, the existence of such phenomenon was also clarified with conductivity and pH measurement as there was a great amount of cation exchange. It can be inferred from this study that the rock-fluid interaction from CO2-saturated brine can result in adverse effect, such as injectivity problem and loss of recovery. This finding must be considered in planning CO2 EOR operations, especially when facing condition of watered out oil zone.

Copyrights © 2017






Journal Info

Abbrev

SCOG

Publisher

Subject

Chemical Engineering, Chemistry & Bioengineering Energy

Description

The Scientific Contributions for Oil and Gas is the official journal of the Testing Center for Oil and Gas LEMIGAS for the dissemination of information on research activities, technology engineering development and laboratory testing in the oil and gas field. Manuscripts in English are accepted from ...