02 آذر 1403
شهريار عصفوري

شهریار عصفوری

مرتبه علمی: استاد
نشانی: دانشکده مهندسی نفت، گاز و پتروشیمی - گروه مهندسی شیمی
تحصیلات: دکترای تخصصی / مهندسی شیمی
تلفن: 88019360
دانشکده: دانشکده مهندسی نفت، گاز و پتروشیمی

مشخصات پژوهش

عنوان Wettability alteration of calcite and dolomite carbonates using silica nanoparticles coated with fluorine groups
نوع پژوهش مقالات در نشریات
کلیدواژه‌ها
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مجله JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
شناسه DOI
پژوهشگران عارفه نقی زاده ماهانی (نفر اول) ، رضا آذین (نفر دوم) ، شهریار عصفوری (نفر سوم) ، روح اله فاتحی (نفر چهارم)

چکیده

Altering the wettability of a gas-liquid system from liquid-wetting to intermediate gas-wetting is a novel strategy for removing condensate from gas condensate reservoirs. In this paper, the role of a silica nanofluid modified by fluorine groups in the wettability alteration of seven carbonate samples was investigated. An acid test and Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy analysis were carried out to identify the levels of calcite and dolomite as dominant carbonate minerals and evaluate the coating ability of the proposed chemical used on carbonate surfaces. Contact angle measurements and spontaneous imbibition experiments were conducted before and after wettability alteration. In addition, gas flooding experiments were conducted on three permeable core samples to investigate the effect of the nanofluid on the fluid flow at the core scale. Contact angle measurements demonstrated that the wetting tendency of core samples altered from liquid-wetting into gas-wetting after surface treatment, and a higher contact angle was achieved for carbonate cores with less dolomite than calcite. EDX analysis showed more fluorine and silica adsorption on calcite, compared to dolomite cores. After surface modification, the brine imbibed into carbonate core samples 1 to 7 decreased by 0.104, 0.174, 0.0016, 0.773, 0.355, 0.056, and 0.279, respectively. Core flooding results demonstrated that the recovery factor of three permeable core samples increased from 56.52%, 49.69%, and 65.33%–69.34%, 56.75%, and 76.72%, respectively.