Litcius/Paper detail

Quantifying the Low Salinity Waterflooding Effect

Omar Chaabi, Mohammed Al Kobaisi, Mohammed Haroun

2021Energies10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Low salinity waterflooding (LSW) has shown promising results in terms of increasing oil recovery at laboratory scale. In this work, we study the LSW effect, at laboratory scale, and provide a basis for quantifying the effect at field scale by extracting reliable relative permeability curves. These were achieved by experimental and numerical interpretation of laboratory core studies. Carbonate rock samples were used to conduct secondary and tertiary unsteady-state coreflooding experiments at reservoir conditions. A mathematical model was developed as a research tool to interpret and further validate the physical plausibility of the coreflooding experiments. At core scale and a typical field rate of ~1 ft/day, low salinity water (LS) resulted in not only ~20% higher oil recovery compared to formation water (FW) but also recovered oil sooner. LS water also showed capability of reducing the residual oil saturation when flooded in tertiary mode. The greater oil recovery caused by LSW can be attributed to altering the wettability of the rock to less oil-wet as confirmed by the numerically extracted relative permeability curves.

Topics & Concepts

Relative permeabilityPetroleum engineeringResidual oilSalinityEnhanced oil recoveryOil fieldFormation waterSaturation (graph theory)Permeability (electromagnetism)Oil productionSoil scienceCarbonateEnvironmental scienceGeologyGeotechnical engineeringChemistryMaterials scienceMathematicsMetallurgyMembraneOceanographyPorosityBiochemistryCombinatoricsEnhanced Oil Recovery TechniquesHydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir AnalysisHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis
Quantifying the Low Salinity Waterflooding Effect | Litcius