Investigation of enhanced oil recovery by Water Alternating Gas (WAG) injection in sandstone and carbonate rocks
Abstract
Water-Alternating-Gas (WAG) injection is regarded as a very efficient and successful
EOR technique for lowering the residual oil in a porous medium, especially from water-flooded/gas-flooded hydrocarbon reservoirs. However, as a special case of three-phase
flow, WAG injection involves complex physics and mechanisms in the process of oil
recovery, for which there is still an incomplete understanding. In the literature, laboratory
data on WAG processes are very limited, especially for certain conditions, such as, the
ultra-low oil/gas interfacial tension (IFT), weakly/non-water-wet, non-uniform
wettability and different rock types. For numerical simulation, reliable three-phase
relative permeability (kr) data with their hysteresis effects are crucial for optimizing the
predictions of WAG injection performance in oil reservoirs.
Although the current models of three-phase relative permeability (e.g. Stone I, Stone II
or Baker) and its hysteresis (e.g. WAG hysteresis) are widely applied for reservoir rocks
which are non-water-wet, for their good description of pore geometry and wettability,
their application is limited for a water-wet system. Since these correlations, which are
available in the most widely used reservoir simulators, were developed on the basis of
idealizing the rock and simplifying the assumptions, none of these correlations are able
to account for the behaviours of the complex mechanisms, multi-phase flow, multi-physics processes and hysteresis phenomena involved in oil recovery by WAG flooding,
especially for certain reservoir fluid conditions (e.g. ultra-low gas-oil IFT) and for oil
reservoirs that are characterized by weakly-water-wet and mixed-wet rocks. Thus,
reliable experimental data at realistic reservoir conditions are needed to improve our
understanding of the actual mechanisms, complex physics, multi-phase flow and
hysteresis behaviours underlying the oil recovery by WAG injection and to develop
improved models and methodologies for reliable predictions of the performance of oil
reservoirs under WAG injection.
In this thesis, an extensive series of WAG coreflood experiments is reported, in which
several important fluid/flow/rock characteristic properties (e.g. gas/oil IFT scaling, gas
viscosity, oil-gas/oil-water viscosity ratio, steady and unsteady displacements, cyclic
hysteresis, rock wettability, rock type, and remaining oil and gas saturations) and
operation parameters (slug size, injection order and injection strategy) have been
systematically investigated. The results of these experimental investigations are discussed
in detail in terms of oil recovery, injectivity (or differential pressure) and average
saturation profile (or saturation trajectories). Because the coreflood experiments were
carried out on Clashach sandstone and Indiana limestone core samples the content of this
thesis can be divided into two parts as follows:
The first part presents the results of the investigation of the above-mentioned WAG
parameters in sandstone rock with two different wettability systems (mixed-wet and
weakly-water-wet). Investigating the effect of design/operation parameters on the
performance of WAG flood under immiscible displacement (gas-oil IFT = 2.7 mN.m-1
)
revealed a better efficiency and higher recovery performance for short water and gas slugs
compared to the large cycle injections. Comparison with the SWAG flood shows that
SWAG is the upper limit of oil recovery by small slug water and gas injections.
WAG injection efficiency was investigated at intermediate-miscible displacement
(gas/oil IFT = 0.15 mN.m-1
) and under mixed-wet conditions. The results are compared
to those published at near-miscible and immiscible displacements to investigate the impact of IFT on the performance of WAG injection. The results showed that WAG
injection performance increases as gas/oil IFT decreases and becomes optimum when
approaching the critical pressure.
The effect of actual rock wettability on the performance of WAG injection at near-miscible conditions (gas/oil IFT = 0.04 mN.m-1
) is investigated for a weakly-water
system, and then compared to mixed-wet and water-wet regimes. The comparison reveals
that, regardless of the type of wettability, the performance of oil recovery by near-miscible WAG is considerably superior. Even though oil recovery efficiency by water
flood increases as the direction of wettability changes from water-wet towards mixed-wet, passing through a weakly-water-wet stage, its performance by WAG injection, post waterflooding, decreased for the same direction of wettability changes.
Two WAG experiments with two different binary-hydrocarbon fluid systems (C1-nC4
and C1-nC10) were performed under near-miscible and weakly water-wet conditions to
investigate the impact of gas viscosity on gas and WAG injections. It was found that the
cyclic oil recovery efficiency by water slugs was higher in C1-nC4 WAG than that in C1-
nC10. In contrast, for gas cycles, it was higher in C1-nC10 that in C1-nC4. Furthermore,
the gap between oil recoveries increased as the number of gas cycles increased.
Two-phase and three-phase SS-kr experiments were performed under near-miscible and
weakly water-wet conditions. Comparing these results with those for the unsteady state
indicated significant differences in the recovery mechanisms, due to the difference in the
nature of the displacement experiments. This highlights that the differences in the kr
values between SS and USS in the two-phase and three-phase regions are not only
pertinent to the non-uniqueness problem that is known to be associated with USS- kr , but
also to the nature of the differences in the displacements, flow and mechanisms involved
in oil recovery by SS and USS experiments.
In the second part, a systematically acquired set of experimental data in which the effect
of rock type on two-phase and three-phase flow and displacements have been investigated
is presented. All experiments were conducted on a 45 mD water-wet limestone core and
their results were compared to those obtained from a 65 mD water-wet sandstone core
with similar physical properties to those of the carbonate. These laboratory results
revealed that there is an intrinsic heterogeneity (vugs) in the internal pore structure of the
carbonate rock. Comparison of WAG injection results revealed that WAG injection in
sandstone, with 88.5 % (IOIP %) ultimate oil recovery outperformed that in carbonate,
with 71 % (IOIP %). Finally, investigation of the effects of all the above pertinent WAG
parameters on the remaining oil and gas saturations revealed that the order of fluid
injection, gas/oil IFT and rock type are the most effective parameters on the slope of So,rem
vs. Sg,rem trend line, which is represented by α in the WAG hysteresis model.