This paper clarifies the effect of salinity and hardness on partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide (HPAM) rheology in sandstones with permeability greater than 200 md. For modelers and simulators of polymer flooding, the experimental findings should be of high relevance when projecting HPAM injectivity and fracture initiation and whether viscoelasticity is significant in oil recovery of capillary-trapped residual oil with or without the presence of fractures.
The literature review summarizes the effects of polymer concentration, molecular weight (Mw), rock permeability, and oil saturation on HPAM rheology in sandstones. The experimental work examines HPAM (18 million–20 million g/mol Mw, 30% degree of hydrolysis) rheology in sandstones with permeabilities ranging from 252 to 838 md, salinities ranging from 0.1% to 10.5% total dissolved solids (TDS), and hardness levels ranging from 0% to 0.1% calcium chloride (CaCl2). As expected, the magnitude of resistance factors increased with increased HPAM concentration but decreased with increased salinity.
The maximum resistance factor in the shear-thickening regime correlated well with C[µ]/(k/ϕ)0.5. The velocity dependence of the rheology (in sandstone) was largely unchanged by salinity between 0.1% and 5% TDS. At 1% TDS, the velocity dependence of rheology (in sandstone) was very weakly dependent on CaCl2 concentration between 0% and 0.1%.
This paper examines the relationship between the onset of shear thickening and the inverse of the polymer solution relaxation time determined from bulk rheological data. The level of mechanical degradation was fairly unaffected by HPAM concentration between 25 and 2,000 ppm [in brine with 1% sodium chloride (NaCl) and 0.05% CaCl2].
These findings should simplify the job of modelers when projecting the performance of polymer flooding.
This abstract is taken from paper SPE 224231 by R.S. Seright, New Mexico Institute of Mining & Technology; Stephane Jouenne, TotalEnergies; and Carl Aften, SNF Holding Company. The paper has been peer reviewed and is available as Open Access in SPE Journal on OnePetro.