The present paper deals with emulsion flooding laboratory experiments in porous media, which were performed to investigate the potential use of emulsions as IOR technologies in brownfields of the Gulf of Mexico. Until now, the method of chemical emulsion injections free of siloxanes or fluorinated compounds to promote the hydrophobization of sandstone rocks to reconfigure the phase flow paths, water and oil, generating changes in the flow patterns after the injection of water in order to improve and increase the oil recovery has not been described in the literature.Oil-in-water emulsions were used along with a sand pack and a sandstone core. The flooding tests were carried out with Ottawa sand and Berea sandstones, respectively. The diameter size of the 90 % dispersed phase (D 90 ), which was represented by a hydrophobic chemical compound, was lower than 5 m and characterized by laser diffraction; the continuous phase was water. Initially, the oil was displaced by water injection. At the end of this step, the oil production fell to zero; all the oil inside the pore space was immobile. An emulsion slug was then injected, followed by another cycle of water injection. During this process, the additional oil recovery was higher than 15 %.An oil-in-water emulsion based on a hydrophobic compound blocked a small, water-full pore and additionally, changed the pore surface wettability from water-wet to oil-wet, which modifies the preferential water routes, increasing the volumetric sweep, changing the residual oil saturation and finally, increasing the oil recovery factor.The results suggest the possibility of using this novel technology in IOR projects for mature oil fields that feature medium gravity (20°API) and produce high water cut. In addition, this technology is not affected by water salinity and temperature.
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