Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
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    In situ wettability investigation of aging of sandstone surface in alkane via X-ray microtomography
    (26-10-2020)
    Jha, Nilesh Kumar
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    Lebedev, Maxim
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    Iglauer, Stefan
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    Sarmadivaleh, Mohammad
    Wettability of surfaces remains of paramount importance for understanding various natural and artificial colloidal and interfacial phenomena at various length and time scales. One of the problems discussed in this work is the wettability alteration of a three-phase system comprising high salinity brine as the aqueous phase, Doddington sandstone as porous rock, and decane as the nonaqueous phase liquid. The study utilizes the technique of in situ contact angle measurements of the several 2D projections of the identified 3D oil phase droplets from the 3D images of the saturated sandstone miniature core plugs obtained by X-ray microcomputed tomography (micro-CT). Earlier works that utilize in situ contact angles measurements were carried out for a single plane. The saturated rock samples were scanned at initial saturation conditions and after aging for 21 days. This study at ambient conditions reveals that it is possible to change the initially intermediate water-wet conditions of the sandstone rock surface to a weakly water wetting state on aging by alkanes using induced polarization at the interface. The study adds to the understanding of initial wettability conditions as well as the oil migration process of the paraffinic oil-bearing sandstone reservoirs. Further, it complements the knowledge of the wettability alteration of the rock surface due to chemisorption, usually done by nonrepresentative technique of silanization of rock surface in experimental investigations.
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    Publication
    Silica nanofluid in low salinity seawater containing surfactant and polymer: Oil recovery efficiency, wettability alteration and adsorption studies
    (01-04-2022)
    Behera, Uma Sankar
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    Production of crude oil from a matured oil reservoir is challenging due to the low recovery factor. Hybrid methods have demonstrated potential in oil recovery from the matured crude oil reservoir. In recent years, the low salinity water with chemicals (viz., surfactant, polymer) and nanoparticles have brought the attention of the researchers due to their ability in altering the interfacial properties of the rock-oil-water systems favorable for crude oil recovery. The current interest by industries in injection fluid (i.e., low salinity water injection) has prompted the invention of a hybrid oil recovery agent for matured crude oil reservoirs. In the current study, a novel silica-based hybrid nanofluids (NFs) of variable silica nanoparticles (NPs) concentration in low salinity seawater with anionic surfactant (AOT: dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate) and polymer (PVP–K30: polyvinylpyrrolidone) (sometimes referred to as SMART LowSal) are used as an injection fluid in a sand-pack reactor. Oil recovery from oil saturated sand-pack reactor is observed to enhance due to NFs (hybrid) injection after secondary recovery. The characteristic study of relative permeability curves discloses that sand surface was initially water-wet and converted to strongly water-wet in the presence of NFs. A nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) study reveals that adsorption of the chemical appeared on the sand surfaces, which could be the reason for wettability alteration, and thereby enhanced oil recovery. Similarly, the scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDXA) of the sand samples before and after injection disclosed desorption of hydrocarbon from the sand surfaces after NFs injection. An additional 5–10% oil recovery is achieved after chemical flooding due to the injection of NFs. Adsorption isotherm study well agreed with the monolayer adsorption of surfactant on the sand surface.
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    Publication
    Interaction of Nanoparticles with Reservoir Fluids and Rocks for Enhanced Oil Recovery
    (01-01-2020)
    Behera, Uma Sankar
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    Nanotechnology is a common word used by academia which is referred to the applied nanoscience conducted at nanoscale (1–100 nm) for variety of industrial applications. Application of nanotechnology in various fields is increasing extensively resulting in an enormous amount of publications in the distinct field. Nanoparticles (NPs) possess unique properties due to their larger surface area which leads to prolong application in multifold. Researchers working in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) areas are trying to get rid of challenges faced by the oil and gas companies for crude oil production. This chapter, therefore, focuses on work carried out by the researchers on chemical and rarely on thermal, gas injection, and biological EOR methods using NPs. Chemical enhanced oil is recovery (CEOR) methods taken into consideration due to their popularity in oilfields than the other existing methods. Viscosity, interfacial tension (IFT), and wettability are the major influencing factors for EOR. The authors intend to make the reader understand the pore-scale mechanism behind the enhanced oil recovery in the presence of NPs. In the early stage of enhanced oil recovery, it is essential to understand the properties of various NPs. Literature review reveals that properties of NPs mostly depend on methods they are prepared. Hence, at the beginning of the chapter, the types of NPs, preparation, and their characterization are explained briefly with the application of various nanoparticles in CEOR. Limitation of NPs application in chemical EOR area is spelled out clearly with the recommendation at the end.
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    Controlled salinity water flooding and zeta potential: Insight into a novel enhanced oil recovery mechanism
    (01-12-2023)
    Rahevar, Satyajeet
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    Kakati, Abhijit
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    Kumar, Ganesh
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    Myers, Matthew
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    Al-Yaseri, Ahmed
    Controlled salinity water flooding also known as engineered water flood has been tested as a potential enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method in laboratory as well as at pilot/field scale. However, there are cases seen where the method has failed to show its potential for EOR. Scientists believe that the lack of understanding of case specific underlying mechanism is the primary reason. Many of the literatures claims reduction of interfacial tension as the primary oil recovery mechanism; but recent findings highlighted that modification of electrical charges on rock surface with response to injection brine salinity has greater effect. In order to investigate the same and in search of more insightful mechanism, in this study we have designed and performed experiments with selected chemicals which can modify surface properties of sandstone and also the oil water interfacial tension. The electrical charge of the rock surface and oil–brine​ interfacial tension were modified by tuning salinity of injection water and adding surfactants (sodium dodecyl benzene sulfonate, SDBS and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, CTAB). The electrical charge of the sandstone surfaces was quantified with zeta potential measurement. The oil recovery potential of the injection fluids was tested through laboratory core flooding experiments at controlled near reservoir conditions. Superposition of all the obtained results revealed that low salinity injection brine modifies the sandstone surface to higher negatively charged state than high salinity water. Therefore, with a negatively charged oil–brine interface it causes strong repulsive forces promoting detachment of residual oil and subsequent mobilization. The hypothesis is also proved by the fact that SDBS in spite of resulting in a lower interfacial tension reduction than CTAB yielded higher oil recovery. This is because of the negative zeta potential caused by SDBS to sandstone surface in comparison to the positive zeta potential observed in the case of CTAB.