Page 35 - Formation Damage during Improved Oil Recovery Fundamentals and Applications
P. 35

18                                            Bin Yuan and David A. Wood


          Pichtel, J., 2016. Oil and gas production wastewater: soil contamination and pollution
             prevention. Appl. Environ. Soil Sci. 2016.
          Plummer, L.N., Busenberg, E., 1982. The solubilities of calcite, aragonite and vaterite in
             CO 2 -H 2 O solutions between 0 and 90 C, and an evaluation of the aqueous model
             for the system CaCO 3 -CO 2 -H 2 O. Geochim Cosmochim Acta. 46 1011 1040.
          Pope, G.A., Tsaur, K., Schechter, R.S., 1982. The effect of several polymers on the phase
             behavior of micellar fluids. SPE J. 22 (6), 816 830.
          Porter, K.E., 1989. An overview of formation damage. J. Pet. Tech. 41 (8), 780 786.
          Sanchez, M., Packing, F., 2007. Fracturing for sand control. Middle East Asia Res. Rev.
             37 49.
          Schembre, J.M., Koscel, 2005. Mechanism of formation damage at elevated temperature.
             J Energy Resour. Technol. 127 (03), 171 180.
          Shaoul, J., van Zelm, L., Pater, C.J., et al., 2011. Damage mechanisms in unconventional
             gas well stimulation-a new look at an old problem. SPE Prod. Oper. 26 (4),
             388 400.
          Smith, S.A., 1995. Monitoring and Remediation Wells: Problem Prevention,
             Maintenance, and Rehabilitation. CRC Press.
          Robertson, E.P., 2010. Oil recovery increases by low salinity flooding: Minnelusa and
             Green River Formations. Paper SPE 132154 presented at the SPE Annual Technical
             Conference and Exhibition, Florence, Italy.
          Rudin, J., Bernard, C., Wasan, D.T., 1994. Effect of added surfactant on interfacial tension
             and spontaneous emulsification in alkali/acidic oil systems. Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 33,
             150 1158.
          Sarem, A.M., 1974. Secondary and tertiary recovery of oil by MCCF (mobility-controlled
             caustic flooding) process, paper SPE-4901 presented at the SPE AIME 44th Annual
             California Regional Meeting, 4 5 April, San Francisco, USA.
          Seccombe, J., Lager, A., Jerauld G.R., et al., 2010. Demonstration of low salinity EOR at
             interwell scale, Endicott Field, Alaska. Paper SPE 129692 presented at SPE/DOE
             Improved Oil Recovery Symposium, Tulsa, USA.
          Sheng, J.J., 2011. Modern Chemical Enhanced Oil Recovery: Theory and Practice.
             Elsevier, Burlington, Massachusetts, USA.
          Sheng, J.J., 2013. Enhanced Oil Recovery Field Case Studies. Gulf Professional
             Publishing.
          Sheng, J.J., 2016. Formation damage in chemical enhanced oil recovery processes. Asia-
             Pac. J. Chem. Eng. 11, 826 835.
          Shiran, B.S., Skauge, A., 2013. Enhanced oil recovery (EOR) by combined low salinity
             water/polymer flooding. Energy Fuels 27 (3), 1223 1235.
          Skrettingland, K., Holt, T., Tweheyo, M.T., et al., 2010. Snorre low salinity water injec-
             tion   core flooding experiments and single well field pilot. Paper SPE 129877 pre-
             sented at the SPE Improved Oil Recovery Symposium, Tulsa, OK, USA.
          Skauge, A. 2008. Microscopic diversion: a new EOR technique. 29th IEA Workshop &
             Symposium. Beijing China.
          Skauge, A., Ghorbani, Z., Delshad, M., 2011. Simulation of combined low salinity brine
             and surfactant flooding. 16th European Symposium on Improved Oil Recovery,
             Cambridge, UK.
          Sorbie, K.S., Collins I.R., 2010. A proposed pore-scale mechanism for how low salinity
             water flooding works. Paper SPE 129833 presented at SPE Improved Oil Recovery
             Symposium, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.
          Stellner, K.L., Scamehorn, J.F., 1986. Surfactant precipitation in aqueous solutions con-
             taining mixtures of anionic and nonionic surfactants. J. Am. Oil. Chem. Soc. 63 (04),
             566 574.
   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40