Effect of fluid-fluid interactions on the performance of low salinity water injection in crude oil reservoirs
Abstract
One of the most promising enhanced oil recovery (EOR) methods is low salinity water
injection (LSWI) that has faced several critical challenges, of which understanding the
underlying mechanism is still of utmost importance. The importance of understanding the
underlying mechanism is essential when screening for suitable oil reservoirs for
application of this EOR method. A satisfactory screening method requires a solid data set
in the literature of waterflooding and a reliable shred of information about the underlying
compounds of crude oil for the positive effect of LSWI. In this treatise, the mechanism
of LSWI is scrutinised over a wide range length scale, ranging from micro to pore and
core scale.
At the beginning, the thesis starts to elaborate on the screening of an extensive crude oil
databank including 116 different crude oil samples sourced from different parts of the
world. Formation of microdispersion is confirmed by Karl Fischer Titration method
(KFT) as a dominant interaction at the oil/water interface, which is promoted by
asphaltene molecules of crude oil samples. Following the confirmation of a reliable
screening tool for LSWI, the mechanisms of this EOR method are elucidated over pore
(chapter 3) and core scale (chapter 4 and chapter 5) experiments. It is visually shown that
when crude oil encounters Low Salinity Water (LSW), microdispersion forms
spontaneously leading to wettability alteration and crude oil swelling within the porous
media. Furthermore, fluid displacement experiments with coreflooding reveal an
undeniable link between the potencies of crude oils to from microdispersion and
additional oil recovery during tertiary LSWI in sandstones and carbonates.
In this dissertation, a comprehensive compositional analysis is carried out to determine
the underlying compounds of crude oil that cause microdispersion and additional oil
recovery. Wettability alteration and crude oil swelling are shown as the outcomes of
microdispersion formation at the oil/water interface leading to additional oil recovery
during LSWI. These outcomes of microdispersion will be called low salinity effect (LSE)
and it connects the mechanism and the results of the mechanism in terms of additional oil
recovery. Using the ionisation techniques of Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance
Mass Spectroscopy (FT-ICR MS), it was discovered that asphaltene molecules and
carboxylic acids with carbon number of C16-C26 and double bond equivalent (DBE) of 1-
4 are mainly involved in microdispersion formation and LSE. Moreover, formation of microdispersion by carboxylic acids and/or acidic asphaltenes and partitioning of low
molecular weight carboxylic acids from crude oil into water phase were shown as the
dominant interactions at the oil/water interface. It is indicated that formation of
microdispersion results in a slightly higher interfacial tension, which stem from
engagements of surface-active compounds in microdispersion structures leading to a
lower effective concentration at the interface.
For the first time, a systematic experimental study on the fluid-fluid interactions between
crude oil and water with different salinities was conducted that led to a clear
understanding about the mechanism of LSWI. Microdispersion is confidently proposed
as the main mechanism of LSWI triggered by carboxylic acids and/or acidic asphaltene
molecules. Wettability alteration and crude oil swelling owing to microdispersion were
visually substantiated through microfluidic experiments. After determining the
underlying compounds of crude oil for LSE, coreflooding experiments corroborate that
additional oil recovery by LSWI is only achievable when the crude oil is potent enough
to form microdispersion. The findings of this thesis contribute to a reliable screening tool
through which suitable crude oil reservoirs for LSWI can be identified and the
performance of waterflooding can be controlled based on microdispersion criterion.