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MSc project

Modeling and simulation of EOR due to biofilm formation and gas production, 2019

Andrea Tronstad Lønn

Hovedinnhold

Advisors: Florin Radu and David Landa

Short description of the project:

Microbial enhanced oil recovery (MEOR) is a collective term for more environmentally friendly enhanced oil recovery (EOR) techniques. EOR methods are techniques used after the primary and secondary stages of oil recovery aiming to increase the amount of oil recovered from the reservoir. In this thesis, we look at MEOR methods, more specifically bioclogging using biofilm. We have simulated a two-phase system containing oil, water, nutrients, biofilm, and gas in MATLAB using the MRST package from SINTEF. The gas in our system is produced by the biofilm, which is assumed to dissolve in the oil phase; therefore we modeled it with a transport equation. We assumed that the nutrients are dissolved only in the water phase and therefore we simulate the nutrients in a similar way as the gas. The two phases, water, and oil are simulated by mass conservation equations and the biofilm is modeled by the equation for reversible deposited bacteria proposed by Kim (2006). The implementation of the model has been tested using an analytical solution and a benchmark example. In addition to making our model, we have studied how the gas produced from the biofilm can affect the oil viscosity and, as a result, affect the amount of oil being produced. We have also studied how the positioning of the biofilm can affect oil production. Last but not least, we have looked at how the combination of strategic positioning of the biofilm and viscosity reduction due to gas production will affect oil recovery. Our results show that the amount of oil recovered by using biofilm to perform bio- clogging will increase if we model the oil viscosity as a function of the gas produced. The oil recovery will also increase if the biofilm is located at the beginning of the core instead of evenly distributed in every cell. The best result is obtained when we combine these two scenarios, in other words, when the biofilm is located at the beginning of the domain and the oil viscosity is modeled as a function of the gas produced in the system.

Link to the thesis at BORA: https://bora.uib.no/bora-xmlui/handle/1956/20056