Bernard Bourbiaux (IFP Energies nouvelles) | Andre Fourno (IFP Energies nouvelles) | Quang-Long Nguyen (IFP Energies nouvelles) | Francoise Norrant (IFP Energies nouvelles) | Michel Robin (IFP Energies nouvelles) | Elisabeth Rosenberg (IFP Energies nouvelles) | Jean-Francois Argillier (IFP Energies nouvelles)
Among various ways to extend the lifetime of mature fields, chemical EOR processes have been subject of renewed interest in the recent years. Oil-wet fractured reservoirs represent a real challenge for chemical EOR as the matrix medium does not spontaneously imbibe the aqueous solvent of chemical additives. However, a wide variety of surfactants can now be considered for EOR, among which products that alter the matrix wettability. The present paper deals with that recovery strategy and compares it with other strategies based on viscous drive enhancement. Comparison is based on the physical and numerical interpretation of original representative experiments.
The kinetics of spontaneous imbibition of chemical solutions by oil-wet limestone plugs and mini-plugs has been quantified thanks to X-ray CT-scanning and RMN measurements. Despite the small size of samples and the slowness of experiments, accurate recovery curves could be inferred from in-situ fluid saturation measurements. Scale effects were found quite consistent between mini-plugs and plugs. During a second experimental step, representative drive conditions of a fractured reservoir were imposed between the end-faces of a plug, in order to account for the possibly-significant contribution of fracture viscous drive to matrix oil recovery.
These experiments were modelled numerically, with a simulation software that takes into account the multiple effects of surfactant presence on rock-fluids systems, including rock wettability modification and water-oil interfacial tension reduction. Model predictability of experiments was quite satisfactory without resorting to any arbitrary tuning. Sensitivity studies were also performed to assess the role of physical drive mechanisms and of physico-chemical parameters, in view of recovery kinetics optimization.
In summary, the present paper provides a first inedited quantitative description of chemical EOR processes in neutral to oil-wet fractured reservoirs. This work calls for further development in order to delimitate the conditions on chemical additives and recovery process implementation that satisfy economic viability.