Enhanced Oil Recovery: Prepared by Yasir Albeatiy
Enhanced Oil Recovery: Prepared by Yasir Albeatiy
Enhanced Oil Recovery: Prepared by Yasir Albeatiy
1.1 Introduction
Enhanced oil recovery (abbreviated EOR) is the implementation of various
techniques for increasing the amount of crude oil that can be extracted from
an oil field. Enhanced oil recovery is also called improved oil recovery or
tertiary recovery (as opposed to primary and secondary recovery). According
to the US Department of Energy, there are three primary techniques for EOR:
thermal recovery, gas injection, and chemical injection. Sometimes the term
quaternary recovery is used to refer to more advanced, speculative, EOR
techniques. Using EOR, 30 to 60 percent, or more, of the reservoir's original
oil can be extracted, compared with 20 to 40 percent using primary and
secondary recovery.
Reservoir recovery operations divided into 3 phases:
1. Primary recovery.
2. Secondary recovery.
3. Tertiary recovery.
Primary recovery
Its the first phase of oil production begins with the discovery of oilfield using
the natural stored energy to move the oil to the well by the expansion of
volatile components and reservoir rocks , also the force exerted by the water
Secondary recovery
When energy is depleted, production declines and secondary phase of
production begins supplemental energy is added to the reservoir by injection
of well.
Tertiary recovery
As the water to oil production ratio of the field approaches an economic limit
of operation, when the net profit diminishes because the difference between
the value of the produced oil and the cost of water treatment and injection
becomes ton narrow, the tertiary period of production begins. Since this last
period in the history of the field commences with the introduction of chemical
and thermal energy to enhance the production of oil, it has been labeled as
enhanced oil recovery (EOR).
No single EOR process has yet emerged which is applicable to all petroleum
reservoirs as a general method for enhancement of oil recovery; however,
specific processes that are quite distinct from each other have been developed
to address reservoirs with special characteristics. The criteria for selection of
a particular EOR process are complex because of the large number of
petrophysical, chemical, geologic, environmental, and fluid properties that
must be considered for each individual case.
1.2 Techniques
There are three primary techniques of EOR: gas injection, thermal injection,
and chemical injection. Gas injection, which uses gases such as natural gas,
nitrogen, or carbon dioxide (CO2), accounts for nearly 60 percent of EOR
production in the United States. Thermal injection, which involves the
introduction of heat, accounts for 40 percent of EOR production in the United
States, with most of it occurring in California. Chemical injection, which can
involve the use of long-chained molecules called polymers to increase the
effectiveness of waterfloods, accounts for about one percent of EOR
production in the United States. In 2013, a technique called Plasma-Pulse