The
formation of inorganic scales on the surfaces of
porous media,
production wells, and pipelines can substantially reduce the efficiency
of oil production and damage reservoir formations. Scale inhibitors
(SIs) are often applied to prevent or mitigate scale formation using
a “squeeze treatment”, where the SI is injected into
a formation and allowed to equilibrate, and then the flow is reversed
(return phase). Although organic polymers, such as poly(vinyl sulfonic
acid) (PVS), can tolerate high temperatures and have been effective
for scale control, repeated applications may be required because they
exhibit weak adsorption (retention) in most reservoir formations.
To address this limitation, the release performance of a polyelectrolyte
complex nanoparticle (PECNP) loaded with PVS was evaluated in laboratory-scale
squeeze tests and compared to PVS alone. After injection of the PECNP
into a Berea sandstone core and a 24 h shut-in period, a brine solution
was introduced to the core. Following injection, the free or “active”
PVS concentration in the effluent spiked to approximately 600 mg/L,
decreased to 10 mg/L after 10 pore volumes (PVs), and then gradually
declined to concentrations between 1 and 3 mg/L over the remaining
450 PVs of the test. Minimal PECNPs were detected in effluent samples
during the return phase, indicating that PECNP attachment was irreversible
under these experimental conditions. In contrast, the PVS-only squeeze
test exhibited elevated PVS concentrations that approached the applied
concentration immediately after a brine solution was introduced during
the return phase, and the PVS return concentration decreased to below
the detection limit (0.5 mg/L) after only 70 PVs. A mathematical model
that incorporated nanoparticle attachment and rate-limited release
of the SI successfully reproduced the experimental results and can
be used to predict PECNP squeeze lifetime. These findings demonstrate
the potential application of PECNPs for scale control in reservoir
formations.