Energy & Fuels, Vol.29, No.2, 1151-1159, 2015
Low-Temperature Oxidation and Characterization of Heavy Oil via Thermal Analysis
High pressure air injection (HPAI) without ignition has attracted extensive attention in the air injection based improved oil recovery (IOR) process for light oil reservoirs but was rarely proposed as an IOR process for heavy oil, reservoir. This study aims at evaluating the potential of HPAI without ignition for deep, high pressure, heavy oil reservoirs (Tahe oilfield, Tarim Basin, China). Many low-temperature oxidation (LTO) experiments were carried out to study the oxidation behavior of heavy oil under the reservoir conditions (120 degrees C, about 30-40 MPa) using an isothermal oxidation reactor. The produced gases were analyzed using gas chromatography for their content of O-2, CO2, CO, and hydrocarbon gas (C-1-C-6) content. The apparent hydrogen/carbon (H/C) and molar ratio of the carbon oxides (in-ratio) were also calculated from effluent gases to analyze oxidation behavior. The effects of quartz, reservoir core (characterized by X-ray diffraction), formation water, and catalyst on LTO were analyzed. Thermogravimetry (TG-DTG) experiments were conducted to characterize the oxidation behavior and kinetics of heavy oil. The Arrhenius method was employed to calculate reaction activation energy. The isothermal oxidation experimental results show that reservoir core, formation water, and catalyst have important influences on LTO. The upgrading of heavy oil occurred in the presence of catalyst. The inflammable coke was formed, and combustion reaction happened at 40 MPa and 120 degrees C after oxidation for 7 days, which implies heavy oils have a spontaneous combustion potential for HPAI without ignition process in Tahe heavy oil reservoir. Simultaneously, the heavy oil upgrading indicates that HPAI without ignition process in the presence of catalyst is a promising and potential air injection based IOR technique for deep, high pressure, heavy oil reservoirs such as the Tahe oilfield.