Carbon dioxide (CO2) flooding is a process in which carbon dioxide is injected into an oil reservoir to increase the output when extracting oil. This is most often used in reservoirs where production rates have declined due to depletion.
When the amount of recoverable oil in an oil reservoir is depleted through primary and secondary production, around 60 to 70% of oil that was originally in the reservoir may still remain. [1] In some cases, carbon dioxide (CO2) flooding may be an ideal tertiary recovery method to recover more of the recoverable oil than could be produced using secondary oil recovery methods.
Because of its special properties, CO2 improves oil recovery by lowering interfacial tension, swelling the oil, reducing viscosity of the oil, and by mobilizing the lighter components of the oil. [2] When the injected CO2 and residual oil are miscible, the physical forces holding the two fluids apart effectively disappears. This results in a viscosity reduction of the hydrocarbon and makes it easier to displace the crude oil from the rock pores and sweep it to the production well. [3]
In other cases where the CO2 and residual oil are immiscible, the injected CO2 may still be used to drive the crude oil through the formation to be produced. [4] One reason this occurs is because the injected CO2 can flow into the minute pores that are unavailable to oil and water. [5]
As an oil field matures and production rates decline, there is a growing incentive to intervene and attempt to increase oil output utilizing tertiary recovery techniques (also termed improved or enhanced oil recovery). Petroleum engineers assess available options for increasing reservoir productivity. The options include chemical flooding, thermal/steam injection, and CO2 injection. [2] [6]
One of the criteria for determining if CO2 flooding is a candidate for the recovery of oil from the formation is the pressure of the formation. The miscibility of the CO2 and the crude oil is dependent upon the pressure and the temperature. However, since it is difficult to change the temperature of the reservoir, the pressure of the reservoir may be adjusted, to an extent, to bring the reservoir to a pressure that keeps the CO2 in a supercritical state. If a miscible flood is found to be feasible, the pressure is kept above the minimum miscibility pressure (MMP). [3] [2] The pressure may be below the MMP if an immiscible flood is desired.
A petroleum engineer will then determine a method of using CO2 flooding to recover petroleum from the reservoir. This may be a continuous injection method, a water alternating gas (WAG) method, or some combination. [2] The amount, or amounts of CO2 will be determined by the amount of the pore volume of the formation that is filled with oil. This is known as the hydrocarbon pore volume (HCPV). [3] The petroleum engineer will also decide if the flood will be a pattern flood or a line drive flood. [2] [6] In a pattern flood, CO2 is usually injected into a number of injection wells surrounding a producing well. Alternatively, CO2 may be injected into injector wells surrounded by producing wells. This is called an inverted pattern. In a line drive, the injection wells are located in a straight line parallel to the production wells. [7]
Optimally, a slug of CO2 will mobilize a flood front where the mixture of oil and CO2 will mobilize more oil. [7] [2] This flood front will radiate from each injection well towards the surrounding producing wells where the oil will be produced. The formation of a front is dependent upon the rate that the CO2 is injected, how fast it mobilizes the oil, and the porosity of the formation. [7] Injecting the CO2 too fast will allow the CO2 to channel from the injector directly to a producing well without mobilizing any oil. Injecting CO2 too quickly may fracture the formation, which may again allow channeling from the injector to any or all of the producing wells. [2] [6] [8] Also, injecting CO2 may migrate fines, which are small particles of clay and minerals, may plug the pores and prevent the mobilization of oil through the formation. [9]
In a continuous flood, a slug of CO2 will be continuously injected and not followed by any other fluid. The amount of CO2 is usually calculated to be around 100% of the HCPV of the field or pattern. In a water alternating gas (WAG) process, slugs of CO2 are followed by slugs of water. The overall amount of CO2 may be between 40% and 50% of the HCPV. [2] [6] [8] The WAG process is known to reduce channeling of the CO2. [6]
Sandstone and carbonate reservoirs (such as limestone or dolomite) are preferred for this method over reservoirs with ultra-low permeability such as shale due to the risk of CO2 channeling through hydraulic or natural fractures in the rock. [2] [1] CO2 flooding is still sometimes used in these instances, but usually using the "huff and puff" CO2 injection method, which allows the CO2 to soak in a reservoir after being pumped in through the injection well for a period of time before the production well is opened and put back into functionality. [10] [6] This method reduces the chances of unwanted channeling, and increases the amounts of oil that may be recovered as opposed to the more common CO2 injection water alternating gas process (WAG) or by following a soak of CO2 with steam. [1] [11]
Miscible CO2 flooding is a method preferred for medium to light oils due to the mobility ratio between the CO2 and the oil. [7] The mobility ratio refers to the ratio of the mobility of the CO2 fluid injected into a reservoir for secondary or tertiary production versus the mobility of the oil. [1] [2] [8] For medium or light oils with a high API gravity, fluids or gases that are less viscous themselves can be used. However, if an injection fluid or gas that had lower viscosity was used on a heavy crude oil or bitumen, the injection fluid or gas would bypass the oil and result in a poorly swept reservoir. [1]
In cases where the reservoir is filled with extremely heavy oil or bitumen, steam injection, or other methods that employ heat, are much more commonly favored so that the mobility or viscosity of the oil can be lowered and the extraction will become easier. [1] Generally, reservoirs with lighter oils will have higher recovery percentages with primary and secondary recovery methods, but reservoirs with heavier oils or bitumen will have much lower recovery with primary and secondary recovery methods and the transition from secondary to tertiary methods will have to occur much earlier in the reservoir's lifespan.
Using CO2 for enhanced oil recovery was first investigated and patented in 1952. [12] In 1964, a field test was conducted at the Mead Strawn Field, which involved the injection of a large slug of CO2 (25% of the hydrocarbon pore volume or HCPV) followed by carbonated water at reservoir conditions. Results indicated that 53 to 82 percent more oil was produced by the CO2 flood than was produced by water in the best areas of the waterflood. [13]
The process was first commercially attempted in 1977 in Scurry County, Texas. [13] Since then, the process has become extensively used in the Permian basin region of the US and is now more recently is being pursued in many different states. [1] It is now being more actively pursued in China and throughout the rest of the world. [2] [14] [15]
In connection with greenhouse gas emissions and global warming, CO2 flooding may be used to sequester CO2 underground and therefore offset CO2 emissions elsewhere. [16]
An oil well is a drillhole boring in Earth that is designed to bring petroleum oil hydrocarbons to the surface. Usually some natural gas is released as associated petroleum gas along with the oil. A well that is designed to produce only gas may be termed a gas well. Wells are created by drilling down into an oil or gas reserve that is then mounted with an extraction device such as a pumpjack which allows extraction from the reserve. Creating the wells can be an expensive process, costing at least hundreds of thousands of dollars, and costing much more when in hard to reach areas, e.g., when creating offshore oil platforms. The process of modern drilling for wells first started in the 19th century, but was made more efficient with advances to oil drilling rigs during the 20th century.
Gas reinjection is the reinjection of natural gas into an underground reservoir, typically one already containing both natural gas and crude oil, in order to increase the pressure within the reservoir and thus induce the flow of crude oil or else sequester gas that cannot be exported. This is not to be confused with gas lift, where gas is injected into the annulus of the well rather than the reservoir. After the crude has been pumped out, the natural gas is once again recovered. Since many of the wells found around the world contain heavy crude, this process increases their production. The basic difference between light crude and heavy crude is its viscosity and pumpability—the lighter the crude the easier it is to pump. Recovery of hydrocarbons in a well is generally limited to 50% and 75–80%. Recycling of natural gas or other inert gases causes the pressure to rise in the well, thus causing more gas molecules to dissolve in the oil lowering its viscosity and thereby increasing the well's output. Air is not suitable for repressuring wells because it tends to cause deterioration of the oil, thus carbon dioxide or natural gas is used to repressure the well. The term 'gas-reinjection' is also sometimes referred to as repressuring—the term being used only to imply that the pressure inside the well is being increased to aid recovery.
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Supercritical carbon dioxide is a fluid state of carbon dioxide where it is held at or above its critical temperature and critical pressure.
Residual oil is oil found in low concentrations naturally or in exhausted oil fields. Often mixed with water, it cannot be recovered by conventional techniques. However, part of it can be recovered using carbon dioxide-enhanced oil recovery which involves injecting carbon dioxide into the well reducing viscosity and enhancing flow of the oil. The technique is not new but has not been used extensively on residual oil zones, low-grade deposits of petroleum such as the 40 square miles in the Permian Basin of Texas leased by Tiny Kamalabo. The technique is limited by availability of carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is injected and recycled as many times as possible, and stored in the depleted reservoir at the end of the life for the field. United States reserves of residual oil are estimated to be 100 billion barrels.
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