Branched Alkyl Alcohol Propoxylated Sulfate Surfactants for Improved Oil Recovery
Abstract
This investigation considers branched alkyl alcohol propoxylated sulfate surfactants as candidates for chemcial enhanced oil recovery (EOR) applications. Results show that these anionic surfactants may be preferred candidates for EOR as they can be effective at creating low interfacial tension (1FT) at dilute concentrations, without requiring an alkaline agent or cosurfactant. In addition, some of the formulations exhibit a low 1FT at high salinity, and hence may be suitable for use in more saline reservoirs. Adsorption tests onto kaolinite clay indicate that the loss of these surfactants can be comparable to or greater than other types of anionic surfactants. Surfactant performance was evaluated in oil recovery core flood tests. Selected formulations recovered 35 - 50 % waterflood residual oil even with dilute 0.2 wt% surfactant concentrations from Berea sandstone cores.
Additional Information
© 2010 Carl Hanser Publisher, Munich. Received: 04. 10. 2009. Revised: 15.01. 2010. This work was conducted at the California Institute of Technology and financially supported by the Department of Energy (grant DE-FC26-01BC15362). The authors thank Sasol North Amercia Inc. for supplying suifactant samples and Chevron and Akzo Nobel for their collaboration on this project.Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 19376
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20100810-143228027
- Department of Energy
- DE-FC26-01BC15362
- Created
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2010-08-10Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2019-11-26Created from EPrint's last_modified field