Role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery

The utilization of metal-oxide nanoparticles in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) has generated considerable research interest to increase the oil recovery. Among these nanoparticles, alumina nanoparticles (Al2 O3-NPs) have proved promising in improving the oil recovery mechanism due to their prominent th...

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Main Authors: Adil, M., Lee, K.C., Zaid, H.M., Manaka, T.
Format: Article
Published: MDPI AG 2020
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85092235596&doi=10.3390%2fnano10101975&partnerID=40&md5=e3e0365b30f68c5bf7ba3f7fdfca0f4e
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/29943/
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spelling my.utp.eprints.299432022-03-25T03:15:00Z Role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery Adil, M. Lee, K.C. Zaid, H.M. Manaka, T. The utilization of metal-oxide nanoparticles in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) has generated considerable research interest to increase the oil recovery. Among these nanoparticles, alumina nanoparticles (Al2 O3-NPs) have proved promising in improving the oil recovery mechanism due to their prominent thermal properties. However, more significantly, these nanoparticles, coupled with electromagnetic (EM) waves, can be polarized to reduce water/oil mobility ratio and create disturbances at the oil/nanofluid interface, so that oil can be released from the reservoir rock surfaces and travelled easily to the production well. Moreover, alumina exists in various transition phases (γ, δ, θ, κ, β, η, �), providing not only different sizes and morphologies but phase-dependent dielectric behavior at the applied EM frequencies. In this research, the oil recovery mechanism under EM fields of varying frequencies was investigated, which involved parameters such as mobility ratio, interfacial tension (IFT) and wettability. The displacement tests were conducted in water-wet sandpacks at 95� C, by employing crude oil from Tapis. Alumina nanofluids (Al2 O3-NFs) of four different phases (α, κ, θ and γ) and particle sizes (25�94.3 nm) were prepared by dispersing 0.01 wt. NPs in brine (3 wt. NaCl) together with SDBS as a dispersant. Three sequential injection scenarios were performed in each flooding scheme: (i) preflushes brine as a secondary flooding, (ii) conventional nano/EM-assisted nanofluid flooding, and (iii) postflushes brine to flush NPs. Compared to conventional nanofluid flooding (3.03�11.46 original oil in place/OOIP) as incremental oil recovery, EM-assisted nanofluid flooding provided an increase in oil recovery by approximately 4.12�12.90 of OOIP for different phases of alumina. It was established from these results that the recovery from EM-assisted nanofluid flooding is itself dependent on frequency, which is associated with good dielectric behavior of NPs to formulate the oil recovery mechanism including (i) mobility ratio improvement due to an electrorheological (ER) effect, (ii) interfacial disturbances by the oil droplet deformation, and (iii) wettability alteration by increased surface-free energy. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. MDPI AG 2020 Article NonPeerReviewed https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85092235596&doi=10.3390%2fnano10101975&partnerID=40&md5=e3e0365b30f68c5bf7ba3f7fdfca0f4e Adil, M. and Lee, K.C. and Zaid, H.M. and Manaka, T. (2020) Role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery. Nanomaterials, 10 (10). pp. 1-32. http://eprints.utp.edu.my/29943/
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
building UTP Resource Centre
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Petronas
content_source UTP Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utp.edu.my/
description The utilization of metal-oxide nanoparticles in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) has generated considerable research interest to increase the oil recovery. Among these nanoparticles, alumina nanoparticles (Al2 O3-NPs) have proved promising in improving the oil recovery mechanism due to their prominent thermal properties. However, more significantly, these nanoparticles, coupled with electromagnetic (EM) waves, can be polarized to reduce water/oil mobility ratio and create disturbances at the oil/nanofluid interface, so that oil can be released from the reservoir rock surfaces and travelled easily to the production well. Moreover, alumina exists in various transition phases (γ, δ, θ, κ, β, η, �), providing not only different sizes and morphologies but phase-dependent dielectric behavior at the applied EM frequencies. In this research, the oil recovery mechanism under EM fields of varying frequencies was investigated, which involved parameters such as mobility ratio, interfacial tension (IFT) and wettability. The displacement tests were conducted in water-wet sandpacks at 95� C, by employing crude oil from Tapis. Alumina nanofluids (Al2 O3-NFs) of four different phases (α, κ, θ and γ) and particle sizes (25�94.3 nm) were prepared by dispersing 0.01 wt. NPs in brine (3 wt. NaCl) together with SDBS as a dispersant. Three sequential injection scenarios were performed in each flooding scheme: (i) preflushes brine as a secondary flooding, (ii) conventional nano/EM-assisted nanofluid flooding, and (iii) postflushes brine to flush NPs. Compared to conventional nanofluid flooding (3.03�11.46 original oil in place/OOIP) as incremental oil recovery, EM-assisted nanofluid flooding provided an increase in oil recovery by approximately 4.12�12.90 of OOIP for different phases of alumina. It was established from these results that the recovery from EM-assisted nanofluid flooding is itself dependent on frequency, which is associated with good dielectric behavior of NPs to formulate the oil recovery mechanism including (i) mobility ratio improvement due to an electrorheological (ER) effect, (ii) interfacial disturbances by the oil droplet deformation, and (iii) wettability alteration by increased surface-free energy. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
format Article
author Adil, M.
Lee, K.C.
Zaid, H.M.
Manaka, T.
spellingShingle Adil, M.
Lee, K.C.
Zaid, H.M.
Manaka, T.
Role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery
author_facet Adil, M.
Lee, K.C.
Zaid, H.M.
Manaka, T.
author_sort Adil, M.
title Role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery
title_short Role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery
title_full Role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery
title_fullStr Role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery
title_full_unstemmed Role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery
title_sort role of phase-dependent dielectric properties of alumina nanoparticles in electromagnetic-assisted enhanced oil recovery
publisher MDPI AG
publishDate 2020
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85092235596&doi=10.3390%2fnano10101975&partnerID=40&md5=e3e0365b30f68c5bf7ba3f7fdfca0f4e
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/29943/
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