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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Pulse Flow Enhancement in Two-Phase Media

Zschuppe, Robert January 2001 (has links)
This laboratory project has been done to evaluate pressure pulsing as an Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) technique. To perform the study, a consistent laboratory methodology was developed, including the construction of a Consistent Pulsing Source (CPS). Tests compared pulsed and non-pulsed waterfloods in a paraffin or crude oil saturated medium, which also contained connate water (an irreducible water saturation). Results revealed that pulsed tests had maximum flow rates 2. 5--3 times higher, greater oil recovery rates, and final sweep efficiencies that were more than 10% greater than non-pulsed tests. The CPS design has proven very successful, and has since been copied by a major oil corporation. However, there are two limitations, both caused by fluctuating water reservoir levels. Longer pulsed tests (reservoir-depletion tests) were periodically paused to refill the water reservoir, resulting in reservoir depressurization and lower flow rates. The final effect of this was impossible to quantify without correcting the problem. The second CPS limitation was the change in pulse shape with time. However, it is not expected that this had any major effect on the results. The pulse pressure and period studies were limited by early tests, which did not have the necessary time duration. Both increasing pulse pressure and decreasing pulse period were found to increase the final sweep efficiency. Slightly decreasing porosity (0. 4% lower) was found to lower sweep efficiencies. However, the 34. 9% porosity results were not done until reservoir depletion, so it is difficult to quantitatively compare results. An emulsion appeared after water breakthrough when using the CPS on light oils (mineral oil). This may have been the result of isolated oil ganglia being torn apart by the sharp pulses. Although it is difficult to apply laboratory results to the field, this study indicates that pressure pulsing as an EOR technique would be beneficial. Doubled or tripled oil recovery rates and 10% more oil recovery than waterflooding would be significant numbers in a field operation. A valuable application would be in pulsing excitation wells to both pressurize the reservoir and enhance the conformance of the displacing fluid over a long-term period. It would also be valuable for short-term chemical injections, where mixing with the largest volume possible is desirable.
2

Pulse Flow Enhancement in Two-Phase Media

Zschuppe, Robert January 2001 (has links)
This laboratory project has been done to evaluate pressure pulsing as an Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) technique. To perform the study, a consistent laboratory methodology was developed, including the construction of a Consistent Pulsing Source (CPS). Tests compared pulsed and non-pulsed waterfloods in a paraffin or crude oil saturated medium, which also contained connate water (an irreducible water saturation). Results revealed that pulsed tests had maximum flow rates 2. 5--3 times higher, greater oil recovery rates, and final sweep efficiencies that were more than 10% greater than non-pulsed tests. The CPS design has proven very successful, and has since been copied by a major oil corporation. However, there are two limitations, both caused by fluctuating water reservoir levels. Longer pulsed tests (reservoir-depletion tests) were periodically paused to refill the water reservoir, resulting in reservoir depressurization and lower flow rates. The final effect of this was impossible to quantify without correcting the problem. The second CPS limitation was the change in pulse shape with time. However, it is not expected that this had any major effect on the results. The pulse pressure and period studies were limited by early tests, which did not have the necessary time duration. Both increasing pulse pressure and decreasing pulse period were found to increase the final sweep efficiency. Slightly decreasing porosity (0. 4% lower) was found to lower sweep efficiencies. However, the 34. 9% porosity results were not done until reservoir depletion, so it is difficult to quantitatively compare results. An emulsion appeared after water breakthrough when using the CPS on light oils (mineral oil). This may have been the result of isolated oil ganglia being torn apart by the sharp pulses. Although it is difficult to apply laboratory results to the field, this study indicates that pressure pulsing as an EOR technique would be beneficial. Doubled or tripled oil recovery rates and 10% more oil recovery than waterflooding would be significant numbers in a field operation. A valuable application would be in pulsing excitation wells to both pressurize the reservoir and enhance the conformance of the displacing fluid over a long-term period. It would also be valuable for short-term chemical injections, where mixing with the largest volume possible is desirable.
3

A field and Numerical Investigation of the Pressure Pulsing Reagent Delivery Approach

Gale, Tyler John January 2011 (has links)
The efficacy of injection-driven remediation techniques for non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) source zones is limited by the principle that fluid flow is focused along paths of least hydraulic resistance. The pressure pulse technology stands among a number of innovative methods that have been developed with the aim of overcoming or mitigating this limitation. The objective of this research was to observe and document differences in saturated groundwater flow and solute transport between an injection using a conventional or continuous pressure delivery approach and an injection using a pressure pulsing instrument. The underlying motivation was to identify engineering opportunities presented by pressure pulsing with the potential to improve remediation efficiency at contaminated sites. A series of tracer injections were conducted in the unconfined aquifer at the University of Waterloo Groundwater Research Facility at Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Borden near Alliston, ON (homogeneous fine sand), and in the shallow aquifer at a groundwater research site located on the North Campus at the University of Waterloo (moderately heterogeneous with discrete layers varying from fine sand to silt). A single injection well was used at each site for both the conventional and pressure pulsing injections. Different tracers were used for consecutive injections. Bromide, Lithium, Chloride, and fluorescent dyes (Rhodamine WT and Sulforhodamine B) were used. Formation pressurization data was captured by pressure transducers. The spatial distribution of the injected tracers was monitored at a series of multilevel wells. A groundwater flow and solute transport modeling exercise (MODFLOW and MT3DMS numerical engines) simulating the rapid boundary pressure modulation that occurs in association with pressure pulsing was conducted to complement the field injections. A two-dimensional domain was used to conduct a parametric investigation of pressure modulation and its effect on flow and transport. A three-dimensional domain served to scale-up the two-dimensional results and for benchmarking against field observations. Pressure pulsing simulation results reveal that repeated sudden onset of injection cessation produces brief periods of gradient reversal near the injection well and the development of a mixing zone around the injection well. The spatial extents of this mixing zone are highly dependent upon the hydraulic diffusivity of the medium. Greater heterogeneity in combination with presence of high hydraulic diffusivity pathways maximized the extent of the mixing zone and the magnitude of transverse and reversal hydraulic gradients. Lower pulsing frequency and higher pulsing amplitude favoured a more significant mixing zone, though these effects were secondary to geologic properties. Use of the pressure pulsing tool did not manifest into distinct changes in tracer breakthrough at either field research site. Comparison between tracer tests was complicated by sorption of fluorescent dyes and ongoing well development. Solute transport simulation results demonstrated augmentation of dispersion arising from the mixing zone phenomenon, but no distinct changes in advection.
4

A field and Numerical Investigation of the Pressure Pulsing Reagent Delivery Approach

Gale, Tyler John January 2011 (has links)
The efficacy of injection-driven remediation techniques for non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) source zones is limited by the principle that fluid flow is focused along paths of least hydraulic resistance. The pressure pulse technology stands among a number of innovative methods that have been developed with the aim of overcoming or mitigating this limitation. The objective of this research was to observe and document differences in saturated groundwater flow and solute transport between an injection using a conventional or continuous pressure delivery approach and an injection using a pressure pulsing instrument. The underlying motivation was to identify engineering opportunities presented by pressure pulsing with the potential to improve remediation efficiency at contaminated sites. A series of tracer injections were conducted in the unconfined aquifer at the University of Waterloo Groundwater Research Facility at Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Borden near Alliston, ON (homogeneous fine sand), and in the shallow aquifer at a groundwater research site located on the North Campus at the University of Waterloo (moderately heterogeneous with discrete layers varying from fine sand to silt). A single injection well was used at each site for both the conventional and pressure pulsing injections. Different tracers were used for consecutive injections. Bromide, Lithium, Chloride, and fluorescent dyes (Rhodamine WT and Sulforhodamine B) were used. Formation pressurization data was captured by pressure transducers. The spatial distribution of the injected tracers was monitored at a series of multilevel wells. A groundwater flow and solute transport modeling exercise (MODFLOW and MT3DMS numerical engines) simulating the rapid boundary pressure modulation that occurs in association with pressure pulsing was conducted to complement the field injections. A two-dimensional domain was used to conduct a parametric investigation of pressure modulation and its effect on flow and transport. A three-dimensional domain served to scale-up the two-dimensional results and for benchmarking against field observations. Pressure pulsing simulation results reveal that repeated sudden onset of injection cessation produces brief periods of gradient reversal near the injection well and the development of a mixing zone around the injection well. The spatial extents of this mixing zone are highly dependent upon the hydraulic diffusivity of the medium. Greater heterogeneity in combination with presence of high hydraulic diffusivity pathways maximized the extent of the mixing zone and the magnitude of transverse and reversal hydraulic gradients. Lower pulsing frequency and higher pulsing amplitude favoured a more significant mixing zone, though these effects were secondary to geologic properties. Use of the pressure pulsing tool did not manifest into distinct changes in tracer breakthrough at either field research site. Comparison between tracer tests was complicated by sorption of fluorescent dyes and ongoing well development. Solute transport simulation results demonstrated augmentation of dispersion arising from the mixing zone phenomenon, but no distinct changes in advection.

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