Title: Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery
1Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery
2Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery
- Relevance to microbial technology, engineering
and humanity - Review
- History
- Present
- Future
- Conclusions
- Research and needs
3Microbial Enhanced Oil RecoveryWhy?
- Industrialization
- Growth
- Increasing demand (liquid transportation fuel)
- Limits by permeability variation in reservoir
- Most popular (injection of Microorganisms)
- Produce surfactants, polymer, acid, alcohol,
gases (CO2 and N2) which aid in mobilizing
4Microbial Enhanced Oil RecoveryRelevance
- To microbial technology
- To Engineering and the Oil Industry
- Chemical EOR is not as efficient
- Engineered for single wells (but can be modeled)
- To humanity
5Microbial Enhanced Oil RecoveryHistory
- First experiments in 1926
- First practical demonstration in 1940 by Claude
Zobel - First patent in 1944
- 1950s Americans took interest
- Clostridium acetobutylicum fermented molasses in
wells to produce gas
6Microbial Enhanced Oil RecoveryPresently
- Acid production to dissolve carbonate rocks and
other mineral deposits - Dissolution of sulfate minerals
- Production of gases to repressurize the reservoir
and push oil out of pore spaces - Biofilm development on solid surfaces physically
displacing oil - Production of biosurfactants
- Viscosity reduction related to oil modification
or gas dissolution effects
7Microbial Enhanced Oil RecoveryPresently
8Microbial Enhanced Oil RecoveryPresently
9Microbial Enhanced Oil RecoveryPresently
10Microbial Enhanced Oil RecoveryFuture
11Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery
- Research Needs
- Grants (DOE)
- Research Results
12Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery
- 1. Bacteria of type 012 and o6a were identified
to produce natural gases and some alkaline
products. - 2. Bacteria O9 when cultured in sucrose media was
found to produce polymers. - 3. The organisms 012 and o6a isolated from crude
oil generated Bio-surfactant. - 4. The injected nutrients and bacteria caused a
decrease in residual oil saturation after
secondary stage. - 5. Of the three nutrients (for indigenous
bacteria) used in the experiments, molasses
showed the best results in increasing oil
recovery. - 6. Of the three species of microorganisms used in
this study, organisms o6a and O9 showed the best
results in the reduction of residual oil
saturation. - 7. The increase in oil recovery is due to biogas,
biosurfactant and biopolymer produced by the
injected and indigenous bacteria. The major
contribution to the process resulted from the
solution gas drive created by the biogenic gas. - 8. Some type of nutrients (especially molasses)
and bacteria (especially o6a) show a slight
change in wettability. - 9. It is apparent that the changes in sandpack
permeability have no contribution to the
displacement process. - 10. A very little variation in oil recovery was
obtained by increasing salinity from 4.2 to 10. - 11. It is recommended that extensive laboratory
and field research should be carried out to use
these types of bacteria in MEOR under Saudi
reservoir conditions. - 12. Economical evaluation of the feasibility of
applying MEOR to the Saudi reservoir should be
carried out.
13Questions?