Laboratory study of cyclic liquid solvent injection process for heavy oil recovery through computed tomography

The cyclic solvents injection has been considered for years as an improved non-thermal enhanced oil recovery method for the recovery of heavy oil, which includes three stages: injection, soaking, and production. This paper describes a laboratory study with Computed Tomography and Nuclear Magnetic Re...

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Main Authors: Maria Isabel Sandoval Martinez, Samuel Fernando Muñoz Navarro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Nacional de Colombia 2019-07-01
Series:Dyna
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/dyna/article/view/74983
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spelling doaj-ee1410859a03419e9e98b1e652a866102020-11-25T01:32:34ZengUniversidad Nacional de Colombia Dyna0012-73532346-21832019-07-0186210819010.15446/dyna.v86n210.7498351560Laboratory study of cyclic liquid solvent injection process for heavy oil recovery through computed tomographyMaria Isabel Sandoval Martinez0Samuel Fernando Muñoz Navarro1Universidad Industrial de SantanderUniversidad Industrial de SantanderThe cyclic solvents injection has been considered for years as an improved non-thermal enhanced oil recovery method for the recovery of heavy oil, which includes three stages: injection, soaking, and production. This paper describes a laboratory study with Computed Tomography and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance of a cyclic solvent injection process in a porous medium, using naphtha as a liquid diluent to recover a Colombian heavy oil in a porous medium at 84 °C. The core was scanned during the soaking time to determine the expansion behavior of the mixing zone by analyzing the density profiles obtained after each scan. It was also scanned after the production stage to observe the distribution of saturation in the porous medium after each cycle. Finally, the fluids recovered from porous medium were taken to a nuclear magnetic resonance equipment to determine the recovery factor.https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/dyna/article/view/74983heavy oilenhanced recoverysolvent injectioncomputed tomographynuclear magnetic resonance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Isabel Sandoval Martinez
Samuel Fernando Muñoz Navarro
spellingShingle Maria Isabel Sandoval Martinez
Samuel Fernando Muñoz Navarro
Laboratory study of cyclic liquid solvent injection process for heavy oil recovery through computed tomography
Dyna
heavy oil
enhanced recovery
solvent injection
computed tomography
nuclear magnetic resonance
author_facet Maria Isabel Sandoval Martinez
Samuel Fernando Muñoz Navarro
author_sort Maria Isabel Sandoval Martinez
title Laboratory study of cyclic liquid solvent injection process for heavy oil recovery through computed tomography
title_short Laboratory study of cyclic liquid solvent injection process for heavy oil recovery through computed tomography
title_full Laboratory study of cyclic liquid solvent injection process for heavy oil recovery through computed tomography
title_fullStr Laboratory study of cyclic liquid solvent injection process for heavy oil recovery through computed tomography
title_full_unstemmed Laboratory study of cyclic liquid solvent injection process for heavy oil recovery through computed tomography
title_sort laboratory study of cyclic liquid solvent injection process for heavy oil recovery through computed tomography
publisher Universidad Nacional de Colombia
series Dyna
issn 0012-7353
2346-2183
publishDate 2019-07-01
description The cyclic solvents injection has been considered for years as an improved non-thermal enhanced oil recovery method for the recovery of heavy oil, which includes three stages: injection, soaking, and production. This paper describes a laboratory study with Computed Tomography and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance of a cyclic solvent injection process in a porous medium, using naphtha as a liquid diluent to recover a Colombian heavy oil in a porous medium at 84 °C. The core was scanned during the soaking time to determine the expansion behavior of the mixing zone by analyzing the density profiles obtained after each scan. It was also scanned after the production stage to observe the distribution of saturation in the porous medium after each cycle. Finally, the fluids recovered from porous medium were taken to a nuclear magnetic resonance equipment to determine the recovery factor.
topic heavy oil
enhanced recovery
solvent injection
computed tomography
nuclear magnetic resonance
url https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/dyna/article/view/74983
work_keys_str_mv AT mariaisabelsandovalmartinez laboratorystudyofcyclicliquidsolventinjectionprocessforheavyoilrecoverythroughcomputedtomography
AT samuelfernandomunoznavarro laboratorystudyofcyclicliquidsolventinjectionprocessforheavyoilrecoverythroughcomputedtomography
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