International Journal of Multiphase Flow, Vol.55, 11-23, 2013
Dynamics of surfactant-enhanced oil mobilization and solubilization in porous media: Experiments and numerical modeling
A fast and accurate technique based on multipoint electrical measurements is used to monitor the hydrocarbon mobilization and solubilization in a porous medium during the rate-controlled injection of a surfactant solution. The residual n-decane (n-C-10) remaining in a soil column after one cycle of n-decane/NaCl solution drainage-imbibition is flushed by NaCl and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) solution. The transient response of the water saturation averaged over five successive segments of the soil column is determined by monitoring the electrical resistance between successive ring electrodes, whereas the dissolved n-C-10 concentration in effluent is measured with solid phase micro-extraction (SPME) and Gas Chromatography-Flame Ionization Detector (GC-FID). The oil ganglia mobilization and solubilization processes are modelled by using 1-dimensional mass balances coupled with a 2-parameter dispersion-like equation describing the rate of oil ganglia mobilization driven by the surfactant concentration gradient. The inverse modeling of experimental datasets allows the estimation of the parameters quantifying the rates of oil mobilization and solubilization. Visualization experiments of solitary n-C-10 ganglia solubilization in flowing SDS/NaCl aqueous solution are employed to estimate approximately the local (pore-scale) mass-transfer coefficient of solubilization and assess the corresponding overall coefficient estimated from soil column test. (c) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Porous media;Oil mobilization;Surfactant;Oil solubilization;Oil ganglia;Numerical modeling;Parameter estimation