Polymer injection to improve and/or accelerate oil recovery is a widespread technique with numerous ongoing and successful projects. In recent years, many field cases have been reported with injected polymer viscosity ranging from 5 to 160cP, producing large incremental oil volumes, without major injectivity issues. These field results often contradict pessimistic predictions of injectivity from prior studies. Despite abundant publications on the subject, there is no standard explanation of the reasons for discrepancies between forecast and actual behavior, and many questions are not yet fully answered. Will it be possible to inject the polymer solution at target viscosity?
How much to inject? How fast? Will high pressures lead to fracturing or polymer degradation? Should the polymer solution be pre-treated, pre-sheared? What should be done if planned injection rates are not achievable? Will injectivity decline over time?
Why is it so Difficult to Predict Polymer Injectivity in Chemical Oil Recovery Processes?
Why is it so Difficult to Predict Polymer Injectivity in Chemical Oil Recovery Processes?
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