Plj. Zitha et Cw. Botermans, BRIDGING ADSORPTION OF FLEXIBLE POLYMERS IN LOW-PERMEABILITY POROUS-MEDIA, SPE production & facilities, 13(1), 1998, pp. 15-20
Polymers used in water control are believed to always invade low-perme
ability layers to a sizable extent, impairing oil production. For this
reason, water-shutoff treatments are usually combined with zone isola
tion; however, zone isolation is impractical in most wells, and the po
lymer must be injected through the whole open interval. Small invasion
of low-permeability layers must then be ensured by some intrinsic pro
perty of the polymer. This idea was proved in a recent study, where po
lymer penetration in low-to-medium permeability cores was shown to be
much smaller than usually predicted. This effect was explained by the
bridging adsorption of stretched chains across the smallest pores. Thi
s paper develops a mathematical model for this phenomenon, and checks
its true effect on placement by use of a prototype reservoir. The simu
lations confirm that polymer penetration in low-permeability layers de
creases greatly when bridging adsorption is present.