Enhanced Oil Recovery by Injecting Oleic Acid as a Surfactant into the Porous Medium ()
1. Introduction
After the primary recovery of oil (which uses the tank pressure above atmospheric pressure as a production engine) and the secondary recovery (injection of water or gas to increase and maintain the pressure in the deposit) during which 20 at 40% of the oil initially present is extracted, the improved recovery of oil known as tertiary recovery makes it possible to extend exploitation in the oil fields and the recovery up to 30% to 60% of the oil obtained present [1] [2] [3].
Improved oil recovery techniques are more expensive than primary and secondary recovery methods, hence the choice used oleic acid as a surfactant which is cheaper and abundant in nature to improve the mobility of the flow between the fluid injected and the oil that remains trapped in the pores. Oleic acid constitutes between 55% and 80% of olive oil, and is full of all animal or vegetable oils, such as grape seed oil which represents 15% to 20%, see Table 1.
By injecting oleic acid into porous media containing water and petroleum, the volume of oil recovered increases with the concentration of oleic acid.
So we can put forward the hypothesis that the viscosity of water increases and that of petroleum decreases, which facilitates the sweeping and the transport of petroleum towards the exit.
The objective of this research work is to try to understand how to efficiently mobilize and move the trapped oil in porous media towards the outlet.
In this experimental work, the less viscous oil is displaced by water, a Newtonian fluid and by surfactants which facilitate sweeping, see Figure 1.
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Table 1. Mass percentage of oleic acid of animal and vegetable origin [16] [17].
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Figure 1. Enhanced recovery of petroleum by injection of water and surfactants (secondary and tertiary) [4].
2. Experimental Study
2.1. Introduction
The chemical composition of crude oil is complex and very variable from one oil field to another. Some are very viscous, others are corrosive and others contain sediments or paraffin crystals. This induces many constraints for their handling.
Therefore, most of the industries and laboratories involved in the formulation of surfactants for enhanced oil recovery, have chosen to work with alkaline solutions coupled with solutions of polymers and surfactants. This method has been tested in the laboratory and in oil fields and it has been shown to be effective in displacing residual oil saturation [5] [6] [7] [8]. Among the methods of enhanced oil recovery, on an injected into the porous medium saturated with petroleum, olive oil with different concentrations of oleic acid, which allows the efficiency of scanning on a macroscopic scale by increasing the viscosity of the displacing fluid. Presenting between 60% and 80% of the composition of olive oil, oleic acid makes it possible, on a microscopic scale, to reduce the permeability with respect to tank water thanks to the various mechanisms of retention of molecules, which is the case of surfactants, [9] [10] [11]. We have chosen to use oleic acid because of its abundance in nature, see Table 1.
2.2. Oleic Acid
Oleic acid is an amphiphilic molecule made up of two parts: a polar hydrophilic group and a non-polar hydrophobic part, see Figure 2. The polar head makes the surfactant formed from oleic acid soluble in water and polar solvents while the hydrophobic tail makes it soluble in non-polar solvents and petroleum. The relative sizes of the two groups determine a number of properties [12] [13] [14].
2.3. Reactivity of the Carboxylic Function
The carboxylic function -COOH has an acidic hydrogen (mobile hydrogen) which can react with a base like soda. A carboxylate ion -COO- is then formed.
The presence of this group increases the water solubility of this chemical species. However, the essential property of sodium oleate is to be a surfactant. The two-phase mixture of yellow oleic acid and water with soda gives a milky (white) system which lathers when stirred.
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Figure 2. The oleic acid used to form the surfactants [15].
Combined surfactants have been the most studied as models of giant micelles both in theory and in practice.
These studies have made it possible to understand the microstructure of these surfactants in the presence of different additives and their influence on enhanced oil recovery [18] [19] [20] [21].
3. Equations and Models
The application of Darcy’s law for each phase allows us to describe two-phase flows in porous media. We use for each phase dimensionless factors
and
called relative phase permeabilities, which take into account the speed of flow of the two fluids.
For incompressible liquids like water and petroleum, the equations for the conservation of mass and momentum have the form:
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
With w and 0 the respective indices of the water and petroleum phases; saturation s of the oil-containing phase;
the speed of flow in the porous medium; k permeability,
porosity;
is the dynamic viscosity; P is the phase pressure;
is the macroscopic capillary pressure;
is the surface tension;
is the contact angle;
and
are respectively the filtration speeds of water and petroleum in the porous medium; t is the time. Relative permeabilities
,
and the additional capillary pressure
, which are empirical functions, depend on saturation. By intruding on the expressions of speeds
and
, in relation (1), we obtain the following relations according to s and for
:
Equations (1)-(4), are valid for the flow domain before the front, where we observe the two-phase flow. However, it is possible to show that they also remain valid after the front, where only the displaced phase flows. In effect, after the front s = 0 (or the saturation is equal to a non-zero value, but the water is motionless),
,
,
(6)
(7)
With
;
;
;
.
The function
is a dimensionless quantity.
In the case of one-dimensional flow, we have:
(8)
(9)
(10)
With
which has the sense of the total speed of the two phases between water and oil.
The relation (5) between the macroscopic capillary pressure and the pressures of water and oil, is written by analogy with the microscopic equation of Laplace for the capillary pressure on an individual meniscus.
Despite the formal analogy, this relationship is insufficiently argued and creates some difficulties which will be discussed and addressed in the next article.
Note that the degenerate models of Equations ((1), (2) and (7), (10)) have a delicate and difficult use to obtain analytical solutions. However, their digital resolutions are quite easy.
4. Preparation of the Sample
The porous medium used consists of sand ranging from 2 mm to 4 mm in diameter. The preparation of the samples consists in filling a plexiglass cylinder with an internal diameter equal to 95 mm, an external diameter 100 mm and 50 cm long.
On both sides of the cylinder are mounted injectors provided with O-rings to inject the fluids at the inlet and recover the fluids displaced at the outlet.
The injectors are fitted with a valve for connection to the injection pump and pressure taps for the pressure drop measured from an acquisition computer.
Once the porous medium is saturated with light petroleum, the olive oil used as complex fluid is introduced into the porous medium at different mass concentrations of oleic acid, see Table 2.
Once the porous medium is saturated with Prut petroleum, the olive oil used as complex fluid is introduced into the porous medium by different mass concentrations of oleic acid, see Table 2.
We have three stock solutions containing 60%, 70% and 80% by mass of oleic acid, respectively. The solutions are prepared by diluting the stock solution in a volumetric flask.
The different olive oils used contain mass percentages of oleic acid of 60%, 70% and 80% respectively.
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Table 2. Influence and comparison of the volume of oil recovered as a function of the concentration of oleic acid contained in olive oil.
5. Experimental Protocol
1) Saturation of the porous medium with petroleum, then with olive oil;
2) Know the information of oleic acid on the displacement of petroleum by introducing olive oil of different concentrations of oleic acid into the porous medium;
3) Determination of water permeability by measuring the pressure loss between 0 and 900 mbar using the pressure sensor;
4) impose a flow rate between 0 and 700 ml/min using the pump;
5) The measurements made are stored on a computer via an acquisition card controlled by appropriate software;
6) A fraction collector is used to collect the volume of oil displaced.
The experimental configuration illustrated in Figure 3 consists of:
The pump making it possible to impose a flow of fluid in the porous medium, of a cylindrical plexiglass tube of length 50 cm and internal diameter 95 mm containing the porous medium reconstituted to get as close as possible to the characteristics of an oil deposit, a differential pressure sensor which measures the
pressure differences between the inlet and the outlet of the porous medium over a range of 0 to 100 mbar from an acquisition computer making it possible to process the data using an acquisition card adapted to the software with analog train and connectable by USB, a fraction collector to recover the effluents leaving the sample such as (water, petroleum, surfactants) and control the time spent filling each tube.
6. Results and Discussion
The improved recovery of the oil obtained by soaking the water and injecting olive oil into the porous medium saturated with petroleum is greater than that obtained only by soaking the water, which results in the spacing of the red graph obtained from experimental measurements with injection of oleic acid relative to the black graph obtained with only injection of water into the porous medium. this spacing increases with the concentration of oleic acid, see Figures 4-6.
This volume recovered by injection of the surfactants depends on the concentration of oleic acid contained in the olive oil.
This may suggest that the samples are more wettable with water in the presence of oleic acid in the porous medium, which facilitates the displacement of petroleum in the porous medium, see Table 2.
Secondary recovery with the injection of water without olive oil into the porous medium, makes it possible to recover approximately 45% of oil. During this phase, we are dealing with a piston type flow during which the oil is pushed uniformly by a water front, which could be produced in an oil deposit by displacing the trapped oil at the level of the pores and rocks to production wells.
Furthermore, the slope of the oil recovery curve in this first phase obtained without the use of surfactants corresponds well to the injection rate which is in ml/min.
For tertiary recovery, the phase of injection into the porous medium of olive oil with different mass concentrations of oleic acid makes it possible to recover 65% of the oil. Unlike secondary recovery, the rate of tertiary recovery is no longer of the piston type since we recover both water and oil.
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Figure 4. Vp volume of oil displaced for injection into the porous medium of olive oil containing a mass concentration of oleic acid of 60%.
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Figure 5. Vp volume of oil displaced for injection into the porous medium of olive oil containing a mass concentration of oleic acid of 70%.
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Figure 6. Vp volume of oil displaced for injection into the porous medium of olive oil containing a mass concentration of oleic acid of 80%.
We also note that the slope of this phase during tertiary recovery is more and more important according to the concentration of oleic acid contained in olive oil than secondary recovery, see the red Graphs 1-3, which is logical if we consider that these are two-phase flows and that we are in the presence of surfactants which are positioned at the interface between water and oil to facilitate sweeping and reduce interfacial tensions. It has been experimentally found that yellow-colored oleic acid is positioned at the interface between water and petroleum, which is consistent according to its physicochemical properties and the numerical models, see Figure 7.
It has been found in the porous medium that the transient regime is quite long without the surfactants, unlike the use of oleic acid, the permanent regime of which was obtained with a relatively short time, see Figure 8 and Figure 9.
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Figure 7. (a) experimental setup after saturation of the porous medium with crude oil and olive oil and (b) sample recovered after injection of water which shows the yellow oleic acid which is positioned at the interface between water and oil.
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Figure 8. (a) and (b) Pressure loss under transient conditions for a short and long period, (c) Pressure loss under stable conditions for a long period without injecting surfactants into the porous medium.
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Figure 9. State of equilibrium established in a short time in the presence of surfactants in the medium.
7. Conclusions and Perspective
7.1. Conclusions
The existence of the difference in affinity of the hydrophilic part and the hydrophobic part of the oleic acid molecule, is at the origin of its self-organizing properties at the interface between water and petroleum (Figure 10).
These properties can lead to aggregates of different sizes and morphologies, as well as to the adsorption capacity at the interface, inducing a decrease in the surface tension of water caused by van der Waals interactions and the formation hydrogen bonds between water and the hydrophilic part of oleic acid.
When an amphiphile is dissolved in water, which is the case with oleic acid, the hydrophobic group destroys the structure of water at the interface between water and petroleum, which causes regular distortion and structuring of the molecules at the interface in order to exclude the hydrophobic parts of the water. During these two-phase flows in this porous medium, it has been observed that the volume of oil recovered increases with the mass concentration of oleic acid contained in olive oil.
Oleic acid therefore has an effect on the viscosity of the displacement fluid and the flow rate. Therefore, the viscosity of the displacement fluid plays an essential role in improving the improved oil recovery. Consequently, the surfactant solutions make it possible to reduce the viscosity of petroleum and increase the viscosity of water, which leads, when injected into the porous medium, to a reduction in instabilities at the interface between water and petroleum, the wettability of rock, to reduce the interfacial tension between oil/water and by mobilizing the drops of oil trapped by capillary effects towards production.
Depending on its physicochemical properties, oleic acid used as a surfactant is positioned at the interface between oil and water, which effectively displaces the residual oil trapped in the pores to increase production. Improved oil recovery
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Figure 10. The oleic acid stabilizes at the interface between water and oil. (a) Transient regime in the presence of surfactants in the porous medium; (b) Steady state in the presence of surfactants in the porous medium.
techniques are more expensive than primary and secondary recovery methods, hence the choice used oleic acid as a surfactant, for example, which is cheaper and abundant in nature to improve the mobility of the oil. Speed between the injected fluid and the oil which remains trapped in the pores.
The injection into the porous medium of olive oil containing a mass concentration of oleic acid of 70% the volume of the oil recovered has increased. This increase in displaced oil is more and more marked during the injection of olive oil containing 80% oleic acid. Consequently, the physicochemical properties at the interface between petroleum and water are modified by oleic acid, lowering the viscosity of petroleum and increasing the viscosity of water, which facilitates the mobility of petroleum in the porous medium.
The physicochemical properties at the interface between petroleum and water are modified by oleic acid, lowering the viscosity of petroleum and increasing the viscosity of water, which facilitated the mobility of petroleum in the porous medium.
7.2. Perspective
Physico-chemical methods improve oil recovery and allow the production of oil in deposits by injecting surfactants acting on the different physicochemical parameters. We hope that this research work can help petroleum companies to improve the production of oil in deposits.
The analysis of the sampling recovered by new techniques will allow us in the next article to verify and validate the position of the oleic acid molecule at the water-oil interface compared to numerical models.