Show simple item record

AuthorShamlooh M.
AuthorHamza A.
AuthorHussein I.A.
AuthorNasser M.S.
AuthorSalehi S.
Available date2022-04-25T10:59:47Z
Publication Date2020
Publication NameProceedings - SPE International Symposium on Formation Damage Control
ResourceScopus
URIhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85082489180&partnerID=40&md5=984b815719129d71d865aaf3c695d1df
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/30419
AbstractChallenges of water shut-off, which is categorized under conformance control, are nowadays common in the oil and gas industry. The excessive water quantities produced from oil reservoirs can make the production process economically infeasible. The target of water shut-off process is plugging fractures or high permeability zones to decrease water cuts. Polyacrylamide tert-butyle Acrylate (PAtBA) is used for such applications. Silica (silicon dioxide) has been found to have a strengthening effect as well as it enhances the thermal and mechanical stability of the system. The objective of this study is to introduce nanosilica to reinforce PAtBA crosslinked by polyethyleneimine (PEI) and chromium Acetate (CrAc3) for low and high temperature conformance control applications. In this study, different ratios of polymer to crosslinker were investigated to choose the optimum combination. Then, nanosilica (NS) with different sizes (20, 50 and 85 nm) was added to the polymeric formulation with the inorganic crosslinker (CrAc3) to study the effect of silica content and size on gel strength. While, the reinforcement of the organically crosslinked gels with PEI was accomplished at 130 C. Evaluation of different systems was based on testing the rheological behavior of the mature gel based on the final storage modulus (G). Differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) technique was also employed to understand the nature of chemical interaction between the various chemicals. The investigation reveals that PatBA:CrAc3 of 9:0.5 is the optimum ratio producing the most strong gel. Silica with the size of 20 nm has produced the strongest gel by increasing the storage modulus by more than 150 %. At high temperature (130 C), 50 nm silica with PAtBA/PEI showed the highest storage modules compared to other sizes. DSC investigation discloses that silica is an inert and has no effect on the gelation reactions. Thus, silica has physical interactions with the polymer in the form of hydrogen bonding which enhances the strength of the gel in comparison with silica-free gels. Therefore, this study introduces a new polymeric formulation that serves as a water shut-off agent for reservoirs at low and high temperatures. The formulation that consists of PAtBA, CrAc3 and NS makes the system more stable and gives it more resistivity toward high shears. Whereas higher gel strength was achieved when PAtBA/PEI/NS was used at high temperatures.
SponsorThe authors would like to acknowledge the support of Qatar National Research Fund (a member of Qatar Foundation) through Grant # NPRP10-0125-170240. The findings achieved herein are solely the responsibility of the authors. Special thanks with gratitude to SNF Company for supplying the polymers used in this study. The acknowledgment is also extended to Oklahoma University for supporting this research.
Languageen
PublisherSociety of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)
SubjectBinary alloys
Chromium compounds
Crosslinking
Differential scanning calorimetry
Elastic moduli
Finite difference method
Gas industry
Gelation
Gels
High temperature applications
Hydrogen bonds
Indicators (chemical)
Mechanical stability
Petroleum reservoir evaluation
Petroleum reservoirs
Polymers
Reinforcement
System stability
Differential scanning calorimeters
High permeability zone
High-temperature conformance
Physical interactions
Polymeric formulations
Reservoir temperatures
Rheological behaviors
Thermal and mechanical stabilities
Silica
TitleReinforcement of polyacrylamide-co-tert-butyl acrylate base gel using nanosilica for conformance control at low and high reservoir temperatures
TypeConference Paper
Volume Number2020-February


Files in this item

FilesSizeFormatView

There are no files associated with this item.

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record