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Keywords = self-diverting acid

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23 pages, 5125 KiB  
Article
Development of a Water-Sensitive Self-Thickening Emulsion Temporary Plugging Diverting Agent for High-Temperature and High-Salinity Reservoirs
by Chong Liang, Ning Qi, Liqiang Zhao, Xuesong Li and Zhenliang Li
Polymers 2025, 17(11), 1543; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17111543 - 1 Jun 2025
Viewed by 519
Abstract
In oil and gas production, reservoir heterogeneity causes plugging removal fluids to preferentially enter high-permeability zones, hindering effective production enhancement in low-permeability reservoirs. Traditional chemical diverting agents exhibit insufficient stability in high-temperature, high-salinity environments, risking secondary damage. To address these challenges, this study [...] Read more.
In oil and gas production, reservoir heterogeneity causes plugging removal fluids to preferentially enter high-permeability zones, hindering effective production enhancement in low-permeability reservoirs. Traditional chemical diverting agents exhibit insufficient stability in high-temperature, high-salinity environments, risking secondary damage. To address these challenges, this study developed a water-sensitive self-thickening emulsion, targeting improved high-temperature stability, selective plugging, and easy flowback performance. Formulation optimization was achieved via orthogonal experiments and oil–water ratio adjustment, combined with particle size regulation and viscosity characterization. Core plugging experiments demonstrated the new emulsion system’s applicability and diverting effects. Results showed that under 150 °C and 15 × 104 mg/L NaCl, the emulsion maintained a stable viscosity of above 302.7 mPa·s, with particle size D50 increasing from 31.1 μm to 71.2 μm, exceeding API RP 13A’s 100 mPa·s threshold for acidizing diverters, providing an efficient plugging solution for high-temperature, high-salinity reservoirs. The injection pressure difference in high-permeability cores stabilized at 2.1 MPa, significantly enhancing waterflood sweep efficiency. The self-thickening mechanism, driven by salt-induced droplet coalescence, enables selective plugging in heterogeneous formations, as validated by core flooding tests showing a 40% higher pressure differential in high-permeability zones compared to conventional systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Polymer Applications)
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15 pages, 17211 KiB  
Article
Impact of Heterogeneity in Low-Permeability Reservoirs on Self-Diverting Acid Wormhole Formation and Acidizing Parameter Optimization
by Jun Luo, Chunlin Liu, An Liu, Xuchen Zhang and Fajian Nie
Processes 2025, 13(4), 1029; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13041029 - 30 Mar 2025
Viewed by 430
Abstract
Carbonate rocks typically exhibit strong heterogeneity, which can have a significant impact on the effectiveness of acidification processes, and different types of acids are needed in the field to achieve various acidizing goals. This article develops a self-diverting acidizing program based on the [...] Read more.
Carbonate rocks typically exhibit strong heterogeneity, which can have a significant impact on the effectiveness of acidification processes, and different types of acids are needed in the field to achieve various acidizing goals. This article develops a self-diverting acidizing program based on the two-scale continuum model and open-source software FMOT, and investigates the influence of heterogeneity intensity on wormhole morphology and acidizing process parameters. The results indicate that different heterogeneity intensities significantly affected the morphology of the wormhole. At low intensity, the shape of the wormhole is close to a straight line, while at high intensity, it becomes tree-like. The reason for the significant impact is that the higher the heterogeneity intensity, the more obvious the dominant path within the rock, the more uneven the high viscosity zone formed, and the more obvious the turning of spent acid flow. The optimal injection rate of self-diverting acid increases with the increase in temperature. At lower injection rates, the self-diverting acid can produce more branching wormholes, and low temperatures enhance this effect, especially at high heterogeneity. Whether at a higher or lower acid injection rate, increasing the acid injection temperature appropriately is helpful to improve the acidizing efficiency. The acid injection rate and temperature should be adjusted to adapt to the pore heterogeneity of different intensities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Strategies in Enhanced Oil Recovery: Theory and Technology)
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