纳米气泡、液化天然气在石油采收方面显示出前景

氮气气泡和可回收丙烷处理提高了石油采收率并清理了地层。

C3 Oilfield Services 的 SingleShot 使用 NGL 将其专有技术深入地层。它可以清除石蜡、凝结水堵塞物和其他油流抑制剂。来源:C3油田服务

成本、获取途径和低效率推动了 EOR 研究的发展,而使用纳米气泡和 NGL 的研究结果正在显示出希望。

尽管钻探成本上升,政府土地的租赁却越来越紧。与此同时,目前的生产方法将多达 90% 的储量留在地下,许多生产商认为,重新开采现有地层比仅仅依靠钻探进行新的生产更有效。

C3 Oilfield Services 和 Nano Gas Environmental 正在 EOR 和 IOR 技术方面取得进展。C3 正在通过一种名为 SingleShot IOR 技术的工艺更新向地层注入 NGL,而 Nano Gas Environmental 使用专门设计的喷嘴将数千个纳米氮气气泡注入油藏中,以提高石油采收率。

蓬松的水

Nano Gas Environmental 联合创始人首席执行官 Len Bland 和首席科学家 Jeff Hardin 在发现纳米气泡技术时正在寻找革命性的东西。这个过程可以使液体所能容纳的气体量成倍增加。布兰德给它起了个绰号“蓬松的水”。他们认为它可以改变世界。

纳米气泡、液化天然气在石油采收方面显示出前景
在堪萨斯州的一口油井,纳米气泡离开灰色拖车,与红色压裂罐中的水混合。堪萨斯州和俄克拉荷马州测试的四口井显示,处理后产量至少增加了 200%。来源:纳米气体环保

“我们必须成为其中的一部分,”布兰德说。

虽然气体增加量尚未完全测量,但布兰德和他的团队认为这是自然水中气体量的 3,500 倍。纳米气泡在光学显微镜下是不可见的,但可以通过称为 NanoSight 的设备变得可见和可测量。

“你可以使用动态光散射看到它们,动态光散射通过液体发射一束激光,”布兰德说。

这种极端浓度会改变液体的物理、生物和化学特性。该公司已将这三种技术用于 EOR、净化采出水并消除污水泻湖的疏浚。

纳米气泡均匀分布在整个液体中,并降低与周围表面的表面张力。它们附着在井下岩石上,使它们被水润湿,从而将石油推出并输送到地面。

据该公司称,获得专利的 Nitro Nano 工艺在一次通过中即可达到其他方法需要多次通过才能达到的浓度水平。

在高压下,气泡变得像不锈钢滚珠轴承一样坚硬。这使得它们能够渗透并将石油从间隙裂缝中驱出,就像压裂一样。

在实验室、在现场

该公司最初使用该程序来清洁采出水,以实现三件事:回收石油以供市场销售、减少危险的硫化氢和硫化铁以及去除水中的总悬浮固体。纳米气泡实现了这三点,哈丁说,这就是为什么“可以产生可重复使用的采出水。”

他们还使用纳米气泡来回收油并去除罐底水中的固体。这使得石油的 API 比重暂时增加了 22%,使其能够流动并成为可销售的产品。

纳米气泡、液化天然气在石油采收方面显示出前景
现场工作人员展示了纳米气泡在去除采出水中的石油、悬浮固体和硫化铁方面的作用。来源:纳米气体环境

“如果我们能做到这一点,”哈丁说,“我们应该能够在油井中开采石油。”

Nitro Nano 在实验室中显示出积极的结果。从注入 12°API 重力油的岩心开始,他们将岩心置于 EOR 就绪盐水中,四天后没有结果。在相同的时间内,硝基纳米释放出石油和天然气,其中一些观察到的气体可能是氮气气泡。

该公司现已在四口剥离井上测试了该工艺。该公司表示,每口井的产量均增加至正常水平的 200%。堪萨斯州石灰岩地层的一口井在 90 天后产量提高了 540%,150 天后产量仍保持在 200%。另外三个位于俄克拉荷马州的砂岩地层中。

这些测试是作为一次性增产注入进行的,使处理剂保持在靠近井眼的位置。布兰德建议,这些油井可以在六个月左右的时间内再次进行处理,“就像酸处理一样。” 不同的是,我们从空气中提取水和氮气。这一切都很自然。”

然而,最终目标是更大规模地使用纳米气泡。

“我认为它作为注水的效果会非常好。我们也想测试该应用程序,”他说。

该公司的目标是将测试范围扩大到产量更高的油井,以确定该程序是否可以扩大该类别的产量。

一枪

2019年,石油技术集团邀请Universal Chemical Solutions (UCS)工程副总裁Susan Starr和工程顾问Dave Szabo研究丙烷和丁烷等NGL在EOR中的使用。该公司希望将其初始生产投入运营,该生产在“吹气”循环中使用丙烷和丁烷,有可能使页岩井的最终采收率提高一倍。

“几十年来,GL 一直被用于补救井处理和在混相强化采油驱中将油田气体掺入注气流中,通常称为水交替注气,”斯塔尔说。

在研究过程中,斯塔尔和萨博与 C3 Oilfield Services 总裁塔德·华莱士 (Tadd Wallace) 取得了联系,后者在之前的公司 Gas Frac Energy Services 中拥有使用液化天然气进行压裂的经验。三人意识到他们互补的想法和经验将加速该项目。2020年,经过一年的研发,公司获得了Single Shot IOR技术的专利。

斯塔尔说,其目的是“解决任何阻碍油藏流动碳氢化合物能力的问题”。

她说,在压裂井中,目的是重建井的原始增产岩石体积。

Single Shot 技术涉及旨在解决损坏原因并让 NGL 将其深入地层的化学物质。斯塔尔说,大多数其他增产方法都涉及水,这在对水敏感的地层中似乎违反直觉。她认为 Single Shot 是水基液体的第一个合理替代品。

还有一个挑战是,处理水力压裂水平页岩井需要将处理液从井跟处转移。她说,单次喷射的设计包括多个转向状态,以推动流体“突破阻力最小的路径”。

开发治疗方法

他们首先将设计重点放在支管长度为 5,000 英尺或更长的水平页岩井上。在这些支管中,大部分压裂水被困在地层中,从而减少了其释放的石油量。斯塔尔说,德克萨斯大学教授 Mukul M. Sharma 在 2015 年的一篇论文中假设,“水力压裂过程中与天然裂缝系统的自然连接使压裂液分布在诱导裂缝系统之外。”

她补充说,根据这一假设,“我们相信这些滞留的水会阻碍油藏将石油流向水力压裂井眼的能力。” Single Shot IOR 处理采用了一种对水有亲和力的表面活性剂,可以从 NGL 转移到水中,从而降低水的粘度并使其更容易流动。”

测试涉及与 UCS 合作,UCS 拥有泵送 NGL 的设备和初始生产能力。尽管研究人员最初的重点是水平井,但使用标准设备在现场使用液化天然气处理这些井可能会非常昂贵。因此,他们开始了直井测试过程。

但他们也意识到,水平工艺的成本非常高,因为它使用的马力比单次喷射所需的要多得多。斯塔尔说,该公司开发了适合用途的设备,以使操作员的手术更具成本效益。

“据我们所知,”斯塔尔说,“之前使用天然气液体进行补救性油井增产的尝试并未使用添加剂或改道。Single Shot 将 NGL 与化学物质(主要是专为丙烷和丁烷使用而设计的表面活性剂和抑制剂)以及改道技术相结合,试图打开受损的区间。Single Shot 专有的[初始生产] IP 旨在消除 NGL 或其在井下接触的油/水的乳化。表面活性剂的设计目的是从 NGL 转移到地层中接触的水,并调动干扰石油/天然气生产的水。”

Single Shot 也适用于石蜡。

“我们开发了一种抑制剂,可以通过 NGL 进入地层。NGL 溶解管中的石蜡,抑制剂旨在防止生产过程中的一段时间内沉积,”斯塔尔说。


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迄今为止,C3 已在 14 口井上测试了该程序,所有井均提高了产量。

“一半的处理侧重于验证该技术,而另一半则应用该技术来处理油井损坏并增加[初始产量]IP,”斯塔尔说。“事实证明,我们的直井处理可以成功清除德克萨斯州罗德萨和奥尔莫斯地层气井中的凝析油堵塞,并清除俄克拉荷马州杰克福克等对水敏感的气层中的水堵塞。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Nanobubbles, NGLs Show Promise in Oil Recovery

Nitrogen bubbles and recyclable propane treatments have enhanced oil recovery and cleaned out formations.

C3 Oilfield Services’ SingleShot uses NGL to carry their proprietary technology deep into formations. There it can clean up paraffin, condensate blockage and other oil flow inhibitors. (Source: C3 Oilfield Services)

Cost, access and inefficiency drive the push for EOR research and the results — using nanobubbles and NGLs — are showing promise.

Even as drilling costs rise, leasing on government lands is getting tighter. At the same time, current production methods leave as much as 90% of the reserves in the ground, and many producers believe it is more efficient to revisit current formations than to solely rely on drilling for new production.

C3 Oilfield Services and Nano Gas Environmental are making advances in EOR and IOR technologies. C3 is updating NGL injection into formations in a process called SingleShot IOR Technology, while Nano Gas Environmental uses a specially designed nozzle to inject thousands of nanobubbles of nitrogen into the reservoir to boost oil recovery.

Fluffy water

Nano Gas Environmental co-Founders Len Bland, CEO, and Jeff Hardin, chief scientist, were looking for something revolutionary when they found nanobubble technology. The process could multiply the amount of gas a liquid could hold. Bland nicknamed it “fluffy water.” They considered it to be world-changing.

Nanobubbles, NGLs Show Promise in Oil Recovery
At an oil well in Kansas, nanobubbles leave the gray trailer to be mixed into water from the red frac tank. Four wells tested in Kansas and Oklahoma showed production increases of at least 200% after the treatment. (Source: Nano Gas Environmental)

“We have to be part of it,” Bland said.

While the amount of the gas increase has not been fully measured, Bland and his team think it is 3,500 times the amount of gas that would be in water naturally. Nanobubbles are invisible under a light-based microscope but become visible and measurable with a device called a NanoSight.

“You can see them using dynamic light scattering, which is shooting a bunch of lasers through the liquid,” Bland said.

That extreme concentration alters the liquid’s physical, biological and chemical characteristics. The company has used all three for EOR, cleaning produced water and eliminating dredging for sewage lagoons.

Nanobubbles stay evenly distributed throughout the liquid and reduce surface tension with surrounding surfaces. They attach to downhole rocks, making them water wet, which pushes out the oil and sends it to the surface.

The patented Nitro Nano process achieves concentration levels in a single pass that could take other methods multiple passes to reach, according to the company.

Under high pressure, the bubbles become as hard as stainless steel ball bearings. This allows them to penetrate and drive oil out from interstitial cracks, much as fracturing does.

In the lab, in the field

The company originally used the procedure to clean produced water for companies that wanted to do three things: recover oil for sale into the market, reduce dangerous hydrogen sulfide and iron sulfide and drop out total suspended solids from the water. Nanobubbles accomplish all three, which is why, Hardin said, “we create reusable produced water.”

They also used nanobubbles to recover oil and remove solids from tank bottom water. That temporarily increased the oil’s API gravity by up to 22%, allowing it to flow and become a salable product.

Nanobubbles, NGLs Show Promise in Oil Recovery
Field workers demonstrate the difference nanobubbles make in removing oil, suspended solids and iron sulfide from produced water. (Source: Nano Gas Environmental)

“If we can do that there,” Hardin said, “we should be able to recover oil in an oil well.”

Nitro Nano showed positive results in the lab. Starting with a core infused with 12°API gravity oil, they subjected the core to EOR-ready saltwater, with no results after four days. In the same amount of time, Nitro Nano released oil and gas, with some of the observed gas possibly being nitrogen bubbles.

The company has now tested the process on four stripper wells. The company said each well saw production increase to 200% of the normal rate. A Kansas well in a limestone formation achieved a 540% production improvement after 90 days, and was still at 200% after 150 days. The other three are in sandstone formations in Oklahoma.

Those tests were done as one-time stimulation injections, keeping the treatment close to the wellbore. Bland suggested that those wells could be treated again in six months or so, “like with an acid job. The difference is, we have water and nitrogen that we’re pulling from the air. It’s all natural.”

The ultimate goal, however, is to use nanobubbles on a larger scale.

“We think it will work terrifically as a waterflood. We want to test that application as well,” he said.

The company aims to expand testing to more productive wells to determine if the procedure scales up production in that category.

One shot

In 2019, Oil Technology Group asked Universal Chemical Solutions (UCS)’ Susan Starr, vice president of engineering, and Dave Szabo, engineering adviser, to research the use of NGLs such as propane and butane in EOR. The company wanted to operationalize its initial production, which used propane and butane in a “huff and puff” cycle to potentially double a shale well’s ultimate recovery.

“NGLs have been used over the decades anecdotally for remedial well treatments and for spiking field gas into the gas injection stream in miscible enhanced oil recovery floods, commonly known as water alternating gas injection,” Starr said.

During their research, Starr and Szabo connected with Tadd Wallace, president of C3 Oilfield Services, who had experience using NGLs in fracturing at his previous company, Gas Frac Energy Services. The three realized their complementary ideas and experience would speed the project. In 2020, after a year’s worth of R&D, the company patented Single Shot IOR technology.

The purpose was to “address anything impeding the reservoir’s ability to flow hydrocarbons,” Starr said.

In fractured wells, she said, the purpose is to re-establish a well’s original stimulated rock volume.

Single Shot’s technology involves chemistry designed to address the cause of the damage and to let NGLs carry it deep into the formation. Starr said most other stimulation methods involve water, which seems counterintuitive in water-sensitive formations. She sees Single Shot as the first reasonable alternative to water-based fluids.

There is also the challenge that treating hydraulically fractured horizontal shale wells involves diverting the treatment fluid from the well’s heel. Single Shot was designed to include multiple diversion states to push the fluid “beyond the path of least resistance,” she said.

Developing the treatment

They began by focusing the design on horizontal shale wells with laterals of 5,000 ft or longer. In those laterals, much of the frac water gets trapped in the formation, reducing the amount of oil it can release. Starr said that University of Texas Professor Mukul M. Sharma hypothesized in a 2015 paper that “the natural connection to the natural fracture system during the hydraulic fracturing process distributes the frac fluid way beyond the induced fracture system.”

From that hypothesis, she added, “we believe this trapped water impedes the reservoir’s ability to flow oil toward the hydraulically fractured wellbore. The Single Shot IOR treatment employs a surfactant that has an affinity for water and will transfer from the NGL to water, making the water less viscous and letting it flow much more easily.”

Testing involved partnering with UCS, which had the equipment and initial production to pump NGLs. Although the researchers’ original focus was on horizontal wells, treating those wells with NGLs in the field could be prohibitively expensive with standard equipment. So, they started the testing process on vertical wells.

But they also realized that the horizontal process was so costly because it used much more horsepower than was needed for Single Shot. The company developed fit-for-purpose equipment to make the procedure more cost-effective for operators, Starr said.

“To our knowledge,” said Starr, “previous attempts at using NGLs for remedial well stimulation did not use additives or diversion. Single Shot combines the NGLs with chemistry, principally surfactant and inhibitors designed specifically for use in propane and butane, and diversion techniques to attempt to open up damaged intervals. The Single Shot proprietary [initial production] IP is designed to eliminate emulsification of the NGLs or the oil/water it contacts downhole. The surfactant is designed to transfer from the NGL to water it contacts in the formation and mobilize the water that is interfering with oil/gas production.”

Single Shot also works on paraffin.

“We developed an inhibitor that is carried in the NGL into the formation. The NGLs dissolve the paraffin in the tubulars and the inhibitor is designed to prevent deposition for a period of time during production,” Starr said.


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To date C3 has tested the procedure on 14 wells, all of which had improved production.

“Half the treatments focused on proving up the technology while the other half applied the technology to treat well damage and increase [initial productions] IPs,” Starr said. “Our vertical well treatments have proven successful in cleaning out condensate blockage in gas wells in the Rodessa and Olmos formations in Texas and removing water block in water-sensitive gas formations like the Jack Fork in Oklahoma.”