Energy Reports (Dec 2023)

Comparison of microbial community structures between oil and water phases in a low-permeability reservoir after water flooding

  • Ziwei Bian,
  • Yuan Chen,
  • Zena Zhi,
  • Lusha Wei,
  • Hanning Wu,
  • Yifei Wu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 1054 – 1061

Abstract

Read online

The application of Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery relies heavily on the microorganisms in oil wells. However, due to the difficulties in separating bacteria from oil samples, studies on bacterial communities in oil samples are limited. In this study, oil and produced water samples from the same well were collected from the western oilfield of the Ordos Basin, and DNA extraction was effective. Full-length 16S rRNA genes were sequenced using PacBio to study the impact of water flooding on the microbial community structure and the potential biochemical functions of bacteria in a low-permeability reservoir. The results showed that water flooding decreased the temperature and salinity while increasing the dissolved oxygen in the tested oil well. It has influence on the reservoir community. Nitrate-reducing bacteria such as Bradyrhizobium and Methylovirgula are enriched in the reservoir. Nitrate and nitrite can be used as electron acceptors by denitrification to produce N2, which can inhibit the growth of sulfate-reducing bacteria. Additionally, bacteria strains such as Flexistipes and Marinobacter can use hydrocarbons as energy source to degrade crude oil and change its properties. The study demonstrated the presence of a large number of advantageous bacteria in low-permeability reservoirs after water flooding, providing a biological foundation for the application of microbial enhanced oil recovery.

Keywords