Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1756474 Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 2006 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Characterization of reservoir wettability is an important part of assessment of potential oil recovery. Oil-based drilling fluids include surfactants, which can alter the wettability of mineral surfaces. Cores exposed to these fluids may not reflect the true wettability of the reservoir materials.The focus of this study was to observe wettability changes induced by adsorption and removal of surfactants of known structure on mica surfaces using tools that are applicable to studies of wetting alteration by crude oil components. The surfactants used were polyethoxylated coconut and tallow amines with chain lengths of 12 and 18 carbons and head groups consisting of two to five ethoxy groups. Mica was exposed to decane solutions of the surfactants. The treated mica was characterized macroscopically using contact angle measurements and microscopically using atomic force microscopy (AFM).Upon exposure to the surfactant solutions, the mica became oil-wet (∼ 170° for both advancing and receding conditions). AFM examination of similarly treated surfaces imaged in air revealed surfactant layers that were easily disrupted or surfaces that showed no surfactant at all. Contact angles were in the intermediate to water-wet range if the mica samples were removed from the surfactant solution, rinsed with non-aqueous solvents, and submerged in decane for measurements of water/decane contact angles. These results suggest only weak surfactant adsorption occurred from non-aqueous solutions. Differences among the structures tested were greater for increased levels of ethoxylation; differences due to hydrocarbon chain length were negligible. Stronger adsorption, higher contact angles, and more stable surfactant layers could be demonstrated when mica was exposed to aqueous solutions after surfactant sorption, depending on the pH of the aqueous phase. Low pH conditions that promote protonation of the surfactants' amine head group produced the greatest wetting alteration. Above a pH of 8 or 9, no surfactant remained adsorbed on mica surfaces.

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