Introduction To EOR Processes
Introduction To EOR Processes
Introduction To EOR Processes
Al-Obaidi
Definition of EOR
Oil recovery operations traditionally have been subdivided into three stages:
Primary recovery
Secondary recovery
EOR or Tertiary recovery
Primary Recovery
Primary recovery results from the use of natural energy present in a reservoir as the
main source of energy for the displacement of oil to producing wells. These natural
energy sources are:
Solution gas drive
Water drive
Gas cap drive
Gravity drainage
Fluid and rock expansion
Secondary Recovery
Usually implemented after primary production has reached its economic limit.
Additional oil recovery obtained by:
Pressure maintenance
Water flooding
Gas flooding (immiscible)
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EOR results principally from the injection of gases or liquid chemicals and/or the
use of thermal energy. Hydrocarbon gases, carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrogen, and
flue gases are among the gases used in EOR processes.
Production of the heavy oils that occur throughout much of the world. If the crude
is sufficiently viscous, it may not flow at economic rates under natural energy drives,
so primary production would be negligible. For such reservoirs, water flooding
would not be feasible; therefore, the use of thermal energy might be the only way
to recover a significant amount of oil.
In this case, a method considered to be a tertiary process in a normal, chronological
depletion sequence would be used as the first, and perhaps final, method of
recovery.
Because of such situations, the term “tertiary recovery” fell into disfavor in
petroleum engineering literature and the designation of “enhanced oil recovery”
(EOR) became more accepted. Another descriptive designation commonly used is
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“improved oil recovery” (IOR), which includes EOR but also encompasses a
broader range of activities (e.g., reservoir characterization, improved reservoir
management, and infill drilling).
EOR processes involve the injection of a fluid or fluids of some type into a
reservoir. The injected fluids and injection processes supplement the natural energy
present in the reservoir to displace oil to a producing well.
In addition, the injected fluids interact with the reservoir rock/oil system to create
conditions favorable for oil recovery. These interactions might, for example, result
in;
Lower IFTs
Oil swelling
Oil viscosity reduction
Wettability modification
Favorable phase behavior
EOR processes often involve the injection of more than one fluid.
In a typical case, a relatively small volume of an expensive chemical (primary
slug) is injected to mobilize the oil.
This primary slug is displaced with a larger volume of a relatively inexpensive
chemical (secondary slug).
The purpose of the secondary slug is to displace the primary slug efficiently with
as little deterioration as possible of the primary slug.
All injected fluids are considered to be part of the EOR process, even though the
final chemical slug might be water or dry gas that is injected solely to displace
volumetrically the fluids injected earlier in the process.
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The objective of tertiary techniques is to recover the oil that would be left behind
after the secondary techniques have run their course, i.e. the target for tertiary
processes is the residual oil saturation in the reservoir after secondary recovery.
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There are two reasons for the large amount of oil being left behind after water
flooding:
1. Residual oil saturation in the swept zone.
2. Poor volumetric sweep
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Average oil saturation after water flooding (Sor at the end of secondary)
= 0.6*(1-0.25) = 0.45
0.7 0.45
Combined primary and water flooding recovery factor = 0.36
0.7
The objective of EOR is to recover some of this remaining oil. This requires
increasing the displacement efficiency and/or the sweep efficiency.
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The result of previous example, however, does indicate that significant amounts of
oil remain following the completion of a waterflood. It is seen that this oil remains
as a result of two factors.
First, a residual oil saturation remains in those places swept by the water.
Second, a large portion of the reservoir is not contacted by the injected water
and thus oil has not been displaced from these regions and has not been
displaced to production wells.
It is desirable in an EOR process that the values of ED and EV, and consequently E,
approach 1.0. An idealized EOR process would be one in which the primary
displacing fluid (primary slug) removed all oil from the pores contacted by the fluid
(Sor → 0), and in which the displacing fluid contacted the total reservoir volume and
displaced oil to production wells.
EV improvement
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Large density differences can result in gravity segregation (i.e., the underriding
or overriding of the fluid being displaced). The effect is to bypass fluids at the top
or bottom of a reservoir, reducing EV. If density differences do exist between fluids,
this might be used to advantage by flooding in an updip or downdip direction.
ED improvment
Residual oil in water flooding is left behind in the form of small isolated oil
droplets or larger ganglia.
Such oil remains trapped due to the capillary forces, which must be overcome
to push the oil ganglia through small pore throats.
Capillary forces are proportional to the interfacial tension between the oil and
the displacing fluid.
The trapped oil can be mobilized by reducing the interfacial tension.
ED can, therefore, be improved by changing the balance between the capillary
trapping forces and mobilizing viscous forces.
This is done primarily by reducing the interfacial tension between the oil and
the displacing fluid.
mobility-control,
chemical,
miscible,
thermal,
other processes, such as microbial EOR.
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