Papers - - Research - Some Factors Influencing the Plugging Characteristics of an Oil-well Injection Water (T. P. 2028, Petr. Tech., May 1946, with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
William F. Cerini Willis R. Battles P. H. Jones
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
512 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1946

Abstract

A test for determining the plugging characteristics of an oil-well injection water has been developed. It consists in measuring changes of the filter rate of a water at constant pressure with cumulative throughput when passing the water through a medium grade sintered glass disk. Application of the test method was made to the water used in the Union Oil Company's experimental water flood of the Chapman zone in the Richfield field, Orange County, Callfornia. This water developed increasing plugging tendencies upon aging, even though the finished water from the plant filter exhibited few such characteristics. The plugging material was found to consist of calcium carbonate, ferric hydroxide, and organic substances that were presumed to be bacterial. Various method of stabilizing this water to prevent the formation of plugging material were attempted. Lowering the pH to approximately 6.4 by injecting carbon dioxide provided a moderately satisfactory means for stabilization but a better method of stabilizing this water was found to be first aging and then filtering. Introduction An experimental water-flood project was started on the Chapman zone of the Richfield field in March 1944 and has been described in a previous paper.' It consists of a single injection well drilled between old producing wells. A water-treating plant using primary alum flocculation, sedimentation and chlorination followed by secondary flocculation, sedimentation and fltration is employed to process the water before in@ion. In all of the water-treating operations, the system is open to the air, and no attempt is made to prevent the loss of carbon dioxide or absorption of oxygen by the water. The clear water is stored in a covered concrete basin and pumped through a Transite line to the suction of a high-pressure pump at the injection well' The high-pressure tubing in the well to the injection zone is cement lined. The untreated injection water is a mixture produced with the oil from the Chapman and Kraemer zones and is supplied from the disposal system. Because the injection well was relatively deep (injection zone about 3400 ft.) and would be expensive to replace, it was believed imperative to supply a nonplug-ging injection water and to develop laboratory procedures for evaluating the treated injection water with respect to its formation plugging properties. This report describes the development and application of the test procedure based on the assumption that the plugging properties could be determined by measuring the progressive decrease in flow rate of the water through a porous medium. If the quality of the injection water was good enough so that the plugging action on the porous medium was of small magnitude, it was reasoned that the tendency to impair flow in the formation would not be serious.
Citation

APA: William F. Cerini Willis R. Battles P. H. Jones  (1946)  Papers - - Research - Some Factors Influencing the Plugging Characteristics of an Oil-well Injection Water (T. P. 2028, Petr. Tech., May 1946, with discussion)

MLA: William F. Cerini Willis R. Battles P. H. Jones Papers - - Research - Some Factors Influencing the Plugging Characteristics of an Oil-well Injection Water (T. P. 2028, Petr. Tech., May 1946, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1946.

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