Characterization of Carboxylate Surfactant Retention in High Temperature, Hard Brine Sandstone Reservoirs

Day 2 Tue, September 01, 2020(2020)

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Abstract
Abstract Large hydrophobe Carboxylate surfactants (MW above 1000) are a relatively new class of surfactants developed for surfactant flooding during chemical enhanced oil recovery (EOR) processes. The presence of carboxylate groups and alkoxylate groups in the molecules provides stability and salinity tolerance at high temperature and in high salinity environments. Many high temperature reservoirs have injection and reservoir brine containing high concentrations of divalent ions making them prime targets for using carboxylate surfactants. Much of the earlier literature showed successful carboxylate applications at high pH during alkali-enhanced flooding, as the high pH stabilizes the carboxylate groups. Such processes are not feasible in the presence of hardness at high temperatures. We present an approach where we use an alkali buffer wherein the pH is adjusted from highly basic to near neutral. Under such conditions we demonstrated low retention and high performance in terms of phase behavior and coreflood oil recovery.
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Key words
carboxylate surfactant retention
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