As. Aronson et al., THE INFLUENCE OF DISJOINING PRESSURE ON FOAM STABILITY AND FLOW IN POROUS-MEDIA, Colloids and surfaces. A, Physicochemical and engineering aspects, 83(2), 1994, pp. 109-120
Foam flowing in porous media can exhibit large flow resistances that m
ake it an attractive fluid for improving underground oil recovery, To
be an effective displacement fluid, however, the lamellae, which discr
etize the gas into foam bubbles, must remain stable. This work studies
how the stability of single foam films, as gauged by the magnitude of
their disjoining pressures, influences the flow resistance of foam in
porous media. Steady state pressure gradients of flowing foam in 2.3
mum2 permeability glass beadpacks and disjoining pressure isotherms of
single foam films are measured for 10(-3) M and 0.017 M sodium dodecy
l sulfate (SDS) solutions with and without NaCl. The constant-rate flo
w experiments show that the addition of salt to 10(-3) M SDS increases
the pressure gradient in the beadpacks from 0.1 to 4 MPa m-1 at 0.50
M NaCl. Surfactant solutions of 0.017 M SDS content exhibit pressure g
radients of 22 MPa m-1, quite independent of salt concentration. Likew
ise addition of salt to the 10(-3) M SDS solutions dramatically influe
nces the disjoining pressure isotherms by raising the rupture pressure
from 0.5 to above 15 kPa at 0.50 M NaCl. The 0.017 M SDS solutions di
splay rupture pressures above 30 kPa, independent of salt concentratio
n. We conclude that high repulsive disjoining pressures in single foam
films lead to strong foam in porous media with large flow resistance.
Further, we find that the limiting capillary pressure for rapid foam
coalescence in porous media is close to the rupture pressure of foam l
amellae as obtained from measured disjoining pressure isotherms.