AI Article Synopsis

  • A hydrophobically associating polymer (HAP) was used to enhance the stability and migration of phenol-formaldehyde resin (PFR) particles in simulated oilfield injection water.
  • The study found that HAP forms stable aggregates with PFR that can move through sand packs but face resistance due to their deformation at pore throats, leading to better oil recovery.
  • Increased concentrations of the PFR/HAP system improved oil recovery rates, especially in low permeability sand packs, demonstrating improved water conformance and diversion in oil extraction processes.

Article Abstract

To improve the dispersion stability of phenol-formaldehyde resin (PFR) particles in simulated oilfield injection water and their propagation ability in petroleum reservoir, a hydrophobically associating polymer (HAP) was employed as a stabilizer in this paper. The dispersion stability of PFR in the injection water was studied by measuring turbidity as a function of time. In addition, the migration property of the PFR/HAP dispersion was evaluated by both cellulose membrane filtration and sand packs-flooding experiments. The results show that HAP can stabilize the PFR dispersion prepared with the simulated injection water by forming PFR/HAP complex molecular aggregates. These aggregates can migrate in sand packs with strong flow resistance due to deformation or disaggregation of the aggregates when passing through the pore throat. Oil recovery was improved by up to 21.1% on the basis of water flooding, and the higher the concentration of PFR/HAP dispersion system, the better the oil recovery effect. Moreover, the cycle of log-jamming/dispersion of the aggregates leads to their penetrations through the bigger pores in the sand packs with a higher flow resistance than water. This process can improve the conformance of water in high permeability sand packs on a micro/macro scale and thus divert more water into low permeability sand packs. Therefore, more oil could be recovered from the low permeability sand packs. Moreover, the bigger the sand pack's permeability ratio, the lower the oil recovery rate by waterflood, and the more the incremental oil can be recovered by the PFR/HAP flood.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9370900PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14153159DOI Listing

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