A wide range of outcrop sandstones and carbonates have been tested for waterflood response to one twentieth dilution of synthetic seawater, using a single crude oil that gave high response to low salinity flooding for a reservoir rock. The tested outcrop rocks included 17 sandstones and 6 carbonates. Gas permeabilities ranged from 1.49 to 7,187 mD and porosities from 10 to 39%. The average reduction in residual oil for tertiary response was only 1.5% OOIP with the highest being 5.8% OOIP; some rocks showed no response. After testing, three of the outcrop rocks that responded to injection of low salinity brine were restored by cleaning and re-aging with crude oil using procedures comparable to those commonly used in restoration of reservoir cores. When re-tested, the response to low salinity flooding was eliminated for two of the cores and significantly reduced for the third core. Companion plugs for 6 of the sandstones and 3 carbonates were tested for increased oil recovery using low salinity connate and injected brine; this data provided comparison with the measurements for high salinity connate and injection brine. Six of the plugs showed increase in recovery for the low salinity waterfloods, and three showed decrease. Results are also summarized for the effects of reduction in salinity for 11 sandstone cores taken from five reservoirs and 8 carbonate cores all taken from the same reservoir. Comparison between results for outcrop and reservoir cores, including literature data, indicates that overall response to low salinity flooding is significantly higher for the reservoir cores.
The spreading of multi-component oils on water has been investigated by direct observations and predicted from measurements of the interfacial tensions and surface tensions of decane, toluene, heptane, and their mixtures. Pure decane does not naturally spread at ambient conditions, as indicated by its negative spreading coefficient. However, when decane is mixed with toluene and heptane, the mixture spreads on water over a wide range of compositions. The spreading coefficients are highly nonlinear with respect to concentration and feature a maximum. The spreading is ascribed to preferential accumulation of toluene at the oil/water interface and heptane at the oil/vapor interface. Molecular dynamics simulations corroborate the hypothesis of preferential accumulation. The accumulation of lighter alkanes at the oil/vapor interface reduces the surface tension, and the accumulation of aromatics at the oil/water interface decreases the interfacial tension. As a consequence, the oil mixture spreads over water.
High-pressure solutions of polystyrene-block-polybutadiene and polystyrene-block-polyisoprene in compressible propane or propylene exhibit a robust micellar region that grows in pressure-temperature coordinates with increasing copolymer concentration, molecular weight, and styrene/diene block ratio. This happens because, while the micellization pressure strongly increases with increasing copolymer concentration, molecular weight, and styrene/diene block ratio, the micellar cloud pressure (the pressure at which the micelles aggregate and precipitate from solution) is largely insensitive to these variables. In other words, neither the block size nor the block ratio nor the copolymer concentration seems to affect much the copolymer separation from solution in the micellar region.
Micellar solutions of polystyrene-block-polybutadiene and polystyrene-block-polyisoprene in propane are found to exhibit significantly lower cloud pressures than the corresponding hypothetical nonmicellar solutions. Such a cloud-pressure reduction indicates the extent to which micelle formation enhances the apparent diblock solubility in near-critical and hence compressible propane. Concentration-dependent pressure-temperature points beyond which no micelles can be formed, referred to as the micellization end points, are found to depend on the block type, size, and ratio. The cloud-pressure reduction and the micellization end point measured for styrene-diene diblocks in propane should be characteristic of all amphiphilic diblock copolymer solutions that form micelles in compressible solvents.
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