Page 481 - Fundamentals of Enhanced Oil and Gas Recovery
P. 481

Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery: Microbiology and Fundamentals                      469


                   [41] T. Jack, Microbially enhanced oil recovery, Biorecovery 1 (1988) 59 73.
                   [42] E.C. Donaldson, Microbial Enhancement of Oil Recovery-Recent Advances, Elsevier, Amsterdam,
                       Netherlands, 1991.
                   [43] J. Khire, M. Khan, Microbially enhanced oil recovery (MEOR). Part 1. Importance and mechanism
                       of MEOR, Enzyme Microb. Technol. 16 (1994) 170 172.
                   [44] A. Tarek, Reservoir Engineering Handbook, Butterworth-Heinemann, US, 2000.
                   [45] S.C. Ayirala, Surfactant-induced relative permeability modifications for oil recovery enhancement,
                       in: The Department of Petroleum Engineering, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge,
                       Louisiana, 2002.
                   [46] W. Xu, Experimental investigation of dynamic interfacial interactions at reservoir conditions, in:
                       The Craft and Hawkins Department of Petroleum Engineering Louisiana State University, Baton
                       Rouge, Louisiana, 2005.
                   [47] J. Taber, Dynamic and static forces required to remove a discontinuous oil phase from porous media
                       containing both oil and water, Soc. Pet. Eng. J. 9 (1969) 3 12.
                   [48] L. Lake, Enhanced Oil Recovery, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1989.
                   [49] Schlumberger, Capillary number, in: Oilfield Glossary, Schlumberger, 2017.
                   [50] R.L. Reed, R.N. Healy, Some physicochemical aspects of microemulsion flooding: a review, in: D.
                       O. Shah, R.S. Schecheter (Eds.), Improved Oil Recovery by Surfactant and Polymer Flooding,
                       Academic Press, New York, NY, 1977, pp. 383 437.
                   [51] S.-C. Lin, et al., Structural and immunological characterization of a biosurfactant produced by
                       Bacillus licheniformis JF-2, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 60 (1994) 31 38.
                   [52] M.J. McInerney, et al., Properties of the biosurfactant produced byBacillus licheniformis strain JF-2, J.
                       Ind. Microbiol. 5 (1990) 95 101.
                   [53] T.T. Nguyen, et al., Rhamnolipid biosurfactant mixtures for environmental remediation, Water
                       Res. 42 (2008) 1735 1743.
                   [54] N.H. Youssef, et al., Basis for formulating biosurfactant mixtures to achieve ultra low interfacial ten-
                       sion values against hydrocarbons, J. Ind. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 34 (2007) 497 507.
                   [55] J.O. Amaefule, L.L. Handy, The effect of interfacial tensions on relative oil/water permeabilities of
                       consolidated porous media, Soc. Pet. Eng. J. 22 (1982) 371 381.
                   [56] S. Kumar, et al., Relative permeability functions for high-and low-tension systems at elevated tem-
                       peratures, SPE California Regional Meeting, Society of Petroleum Engineers, Bakersfield,
                       California, 1985.
                   [57] T. Maldal, et al., Correlation of capillary number curves and remaining oil saturations for reservoir
                       and model sandstones, In Situ 21 (1997) 239 269.
                   [58] P. Shen, et al., The influence of interfacial tension on water-oil two-phase relative permeability,
                       SPE/DOE Symposium on Improved Oil Recovery, Society of Petroleum Engineers, Tulsa,
                       Oklahoma, 2006.
                   [59] A.A. Hamouda, O. Karoussi, Effect of temperature, wettability and relative permeability on oil
                       recovery from oil-wet chalk, Energies 1 (2008) 19 34.
                   [60] H. Nasiri, Enzymes for enhanced oil recovery (EOR), in: Centre for Integrated Petroleum
                       Research, Department of Chemistry, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway, 2011.
                   [61] S.M. Skjæveland, J. Kleppe, SPOR Monograph, Recent advances in improved oil recovery methods
                       for north sea sandstone reservoirs, Norwegian Petroleum Directorate, Norway, 1992.
                   [62] P. Berger, C. Lee, Ultra-low concentration surfactants for sandstone and limestone floods, SPE/DOE
                       Improved Oil Recovery Symposium, Society of Petroleum Engineers, Tulsa, Oklahoma, 2002.
                   [63] A. Cui, Experimental study of microbial enhanced oil recovery and its impact on residual oil in
                       sandstones, in: Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin,
                       Texas 2016.
                   [64] R.D. Sydansk, L. Romero-Zero ´n, Reservoir Conformance Improvement, Society of Petroleum
                       Engineers, Richardson, Texas, 2011.
                   [65] C. Hutchinson, Reservoir inhomogeneity assessment and control, Pet. Eng. 31 (1959) 19 26.
                   [66] M. Gray, et al., Potential microbial enhanced oil recovery processes: a critical analysis, SPE Annual
                       Technical Conference and Exhibition, Society of Petroleum Engineers, Denver, Colorado, 2008.
   476   477   478   479   480   481   482   483   484   485   486