Frontiers in Microbiology (Dec 2020)

Compositions and Co-occurrence Patterns of Bacterial Communities Associated With Polymer- and ASP-Flooded Petroleum Reservoir Blocks

  • Guoling Ren,
  • Guoling Ren,
  • Jinlong Wang,
  • Jinlong Wang,
  • Lina Qu,
  • Lina Qu,
  • Wei Li,
  • Min Hu,
  • Min Hu,
  • Lihong Bian,
  • Lihong Bian,
  • Yiting Zhang,
  • Yiting Zhang,
  • Jianjun Le,
  • Xumou Dou,
  • Xinhong Chen,
  • Lulu Bai,
  • Yue Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.580363
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Polymer flooding technology and alkaline-surfactant-polymer (ASP) flooding technology have been widely used in some oil reservoirs. About 50% of remaining oil is trapped, however, in polymer-flooded and ASP-flooded reservoirs. How to further improve oil recovery of these reservoirs after chemical flooding is technically challenging. Microbial enhanced oil recovery (MEOR) technology is a promising alternative technology. However, the bacterial communities in the polymer-flooded and ASP-flooded reservoirs have rarely been investigated. We investigated the distribution and co-occurrence patterns of bacterial communities in ASP-flooded and polymer-flooded oil production wells. We found that Arcobacter and Pseudomonas were dominant both in the polymer-flooded and ASP-flooded production wells. Halomonas accounted for a large amount of the bacterial communities inhabiting in the ASP-flooded blocks, whereas they were hardly detected in the polymer-flooded blocks, and the trends for Acetomicrobium were the opposite. RDA analysis indicated that bacterial communities in ASP-flooded and polymer-flooded oil production wells are closely related to the physical and chemical properties, such as high salinity and strong alkaline, which together accounted for 56.91% of total variance. Co-occurrence network analysis revealed non-random combination patterns of bacterial composition from production wells of ASP-flooded and polymer-flooded blocks, and the ASP-flooded treatment decreased bacterial network complexity, suggesting that the application of ASP flooding technology reduced the tightness of bacterial interactions.

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