Sandstone Acidizing

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Well Stimulation and Sand Production

Management (PGE 489 )

Sandstone Acidizing
By
Dr. Mohammed A. Khamis
23-02-2016

Sandstones Acidizing
The goal of sandstone matrix acidizing is to remove siliceous particles such as
formation clay, feldspar, and quartz fines that are blocking or bridging pore throats.
This is accomplished by injecting acid formulations containing hydrofluoric (HF) acid
or its precursors, as HF is the only common acid that dissolves siliceous particles
sufficiently.
Standard treatments include pre-flush and/or post-flush stages of HCl acid to minimize
the potential for calcium fluoride and other secondary precipitation.

Acid system for Sandstones

Sandstone Formations
Quartz
Feldspars
Clays
Carbonates

Oxides
Sulfide

Acid selection for Sandstones

Reservoir Mineralogy
Heterogeneous
Clay minerals

Chlorite content
Feldspars (Na, K)

Swelling clays
Acid-sensitive clays (Illite)

Cementing material

Reservoir Mineralogy

Laboratory Tests of Reservoir Materials

Mineral acids (HCl)


Mud acids (HCl/HF)
Mud acid/organic acids
Retarded HF acids *
Aluminum chloride
Boric acid
Phosphonic acid
Single acid system
* IPTC-18571-MS

Chemicals in Use for Matrix Acidizing


Acids
Mineral dissolution (surface or the whole grain)
Mobilization of mineral grains by decomposition of the rock structure

Chelating agents
Precipitation inhibitor
Complexing ions in the fluid
Reducing reactivity of specific mineral surfaces (ion exchange processes,
adsorption)

Additives

Corrosion inhibitor
Iron control
Clay controller
and much more

Keep in mind!
Chemical compatibility with
Reservoir fluid
Minerals of the host rock
Minerals of the fracture fillings
Temperature
Pressure

Laboratory Tests of Reservoir Materials


Testing the compatibility of acids and additives on reservoir material
(cores, cuttings, fluid and if possible of the damaging material)

Characterization of the reservoir mineralogy before and after treatment


Laboratory analyses: XRD, XRF, SEM, DTA, Thin section analysis
Cores, cuttings

Acid response curves

Change of permeability by injection of acid and additives into a core


(P/T conditions of the reservoir)

Compatibility issues

Reservoir fluid analyses


Treating fluid - Reservoir fluid mixtures
Dissolution experiments for investigation possible secondary and tertiary reactions

Stimulation of a core
sample with Mud Acid
12% HCl and 3% HF

Wormhole in Sandstone

Modelling of Sandstone Acidizing


Porosity Model
Permeability model
Precipitation model
2-mineral model
2-acid, 3-mineral model

Porosity Permeability Model


The porosity at a position x and a time t can be
calculated as lA, where l is the average length of a
pore, and A is the cross-sectional area. The total
number of such pores in a unit volume is h dA, and
the porosity is the sum of all such voids volumes per
unit volume.

x, t l Ah A, x, t dA
0

If the initial porosity is know before acidizing:

Ah A, x, t dA

Ah A, x,0 dA
0

Porosity Permeability Model


The porosity at a position x and a time t can be
calculated as lA, where l is the average length of a
pore, and A is the cross-sectional area. The total
number of such pores in a unit volume is h dA, and
the porosity is the sum of all such voids volumes per
unit volume.
Permeability is given by:

k0

2
A
h A, x, t dA

A h A, x,0 dA
2

Porosity Permeability Model

Porosity Permeability Model -Example

Porosity Permeability Model

Precipitation of Reaction products


The most common damaging precipitates that may occur in sandstone
acidizing are calcium fluoride (CaF2), colloidal silica (Si(OH)4),
ferric hydroxide (Fe(OH)3) and asphaltene sludges.
Calcium fluoride is usually the result of the reaction of calcite with
HF, according to: CaCO3 + 2HF CaF2 + H2O + CO2
Calcium fluoride is highly insoluble, so the precipitation of CaF2 is
likely if any calcite is available to react with the HF. Inclusion of an
adequate HCl preflush ahead of the HCl-HF stage prevents the
formation of CaF2.

Precipitation of Reaction products


Contact of the crude oil by acid can cause the formation of
asphaltenic sludges
The tendency for precipitation reactions to occur in
acidizing is predicted with comprehensive geochemical
models of the chemical reactions between aqueous species
and the host of minerals present.

The most common type of geochemical model used to


study sandstone acidizing is the local equilibrium model.

Precipitation of Reaction products

Precipitation of Reaction products

Sandstone Acidizing

Sandstone Acidizing
Typical acid treatment in sandstones consists of the injection of an
HCl preflush, with 50 gal/ft of formation a common preflush volume,
followed by the injection of 50 to 200 gal/ft of HCl-HF mixture.

A post-flush of diesel, brine or HCl then displaces the HCl-HF from


the tubing or wellbore.
Once the treatment is completed, the spent acid should be immediately
produced back to minimize damage by the precipitation of reaction
products.
A sandstone acidizing treatment design begins with the selection of
the type and concentration of acid to be used.

Sandstone Acidizing
The volumes of preflush, HCl-HF mixture and post-flush
required and the desired injection rate(s) are considered next.
All acid treatments, the placement of the acid is an important
issuea strategy to ensure that sufficient volumes of acid
contact all productive parts of the formation should be carefully
planned.
The types and amounts of additives to be used in the treatment
must be determined on the basis of the completion, formation
and reservoir fluids.

Sandstone Acidizing

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