Polymers (Sep 2019)

An Experimental Study on Hydrodynamic Retention of Low and High Molecular Weight Sulfonated Polyacrylamide Polymer

  • Sameer Al-Hajri,
  • Syed M. Mahmood,
  • Ahmed Abdulrahman,
  • Hesham Abdulelah,
  • Saeed Akbari,
  • Nabil Saraih

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/polym11091453
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. 1453

Abstract

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Polymers are often added with water as a viscosifier to improve oil recovery from hydrocarbon reservoirs. Polymer might be lost wholly or partially from the injected polymer solution by adsorption on the grain surfaces, mechanical entrapment in pores, and hydrodynamic retention in stagnant zones. Therefore, having a clear picture of polymer losses (and retention) is very important for designing a technically and economically successful polymer flood project. The polymer adsorption and mechanical entrapment are discussed more in depth in the literature, though the effect of hydrodynamic retention can be just as significant. This research investigates the effect of the hydrodynamic retention for low and high molecular weight (AN 113 VLM and AN 113 VHM) sulfonated polyacrylamide polymer. Two high permeability Bentheimer core plugs from outcrops were used to perform polymer corefloods. Polymer retention was first determined by injecting 1 cm3/min, followed by polymer core floods at 3, 5, and 8 cm3/min to determine the hydrodynamic retention (incremental retention). A higher molecular weight polymer (AN 113 VHM) showed higher polymer retention. In contrast, hydrodynamic retention for lower molecular weight (AN 113 VLM) was significantly higher than that of the higher molecular weight polymer. Other important observations were the reversibility of the hydrodynamic retention, no permanent permeability reduction, the shear thinning behavior in a rheometer, and shear thickening behavior in core floods.

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