Effects of Brine Valency and Concentration on Oil Displacement by Spontaneous Imbibition: An Interplay between Wettability Alteration and Reduction in the Oil-Brine Interfacial Tension
Anupong Sukee, Tanakon Nunta, Nawamin Fongkham, Hutthapong Yoosook,, Montri Jeennakorn, David Harbottle, Nipada Santha, and Suparit Tangparitkul

TL;DR
This study investigates how brine valency and concentration influence oil displacement during spontaneous imbibition, highlighting the interplay between wettability alteration and interfacial tension reduction for improved oil recovery.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how specific brine compositions affect wettability and interfacial tension, optimizing conditions for enhanced oil recovery.
Findings
NaCl at 100 mM optimizes oil displacement
Divalent CaCl2 reduces interfacial tension more effectively
Wettability and IFT interplay determines oil recovery efficiency
Abstract
Brine fluids have recently been of high interest to enhanced oil recovery. Mechanisms for such improvement were widely proposed, including wettability alteration and reduction in the oil-brine interfacial tension (IFT), although their synergistic contributions were vaguely clarified. Crude oil displacement by spontaneous imbibition was conducted in the current research with focus on the effects of brine valency and concentration. Monovalent (NaCl) and divalent (CaCl2) brines at elevated concentrations were examined. Imbibition results showed that NaCl brine at suitable concentration (100 mM) displaced greater oil than too-low or too-high concentrations, and these monovalent brines displaced more effective than those of divalent CaCl2 due to an oil-wetting as a result of divalent ion bridging phenomenon. This echoes crucial influences of both brine valency and concentration. The findings…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsEnhanced Oil Recovery Techniques · Hydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis · Reservoir Engineering and Simulation Methods
