Gas breakthrough is becoming an increasingly common problem,
with
a growing number of gas-and-oil fields being developed. Gas-and-oil
fields are usually characterized by a complex geological structure,
high reservoir heterogeneity, low net-pay thickness, and large gas
cap, which lead to gas breakthrough, especially in horizontal production
wells. Chemical gas-blocking methods lately have gained more scientific
interest and are becoming more applicable in the fields, the reason
being the potential for adjusting the type and properties of chemical
gas-blocking agents (GBA) to increase blocking selectivity. It is
hard to numerically simulate the gas-blocking properties of GBA due
to the complexity of their structure and behavior. Flooding experiments
of GBA injection and blocking ability in zones with different permeabilities
and saturations can provide reliable data to choose the right GBA.
However, there are no studies with an experimental comparison of the
several GBA with a variation of reservoir core permeability and saturation.
In this work, blocking ability and selectivity of three hydrolyzed
polyacrylamide-based GBA in the coreflooding experiments were compared:
polymer-foam, foam-gel, and gel. East-Messoyakhskoye gas-and-oil field
fluid and core material were used. This field faced a gas breakthrough
in middle-stage development through high-permeability zones into long
horizontal production wells. Coreflooding experiments were carried
out in two stages (injection and breakthrough of GBA) with the simulation
of four common reservoir zones: oil-saturated low permeability, gas-saturated
high permeability, oil-saturated high permeability, and gas-saturated
low permeability. Results show that polymer-foam achieved low injection
and medium blocking selectivity. The gel showed higher damaging risks
due to the lowest selectivity in both the injection and breakthrough
stages. The best blocking selectivity and blocking efficiency were
achieved by foam-gel due to low initial viscosity and the in situ
generation of a rigid gas-blocking structure.