Reservoir wettability is important to oil recovery by waterflooding and many other oil recovery processes. The difficulties associated with determination of in-situ wettability, together with uncertainties about application of laboratory observations to field conditions, necessitate a more basic understanding of factors that control wettability. We previously reported that the adhesion of crude oil to a solid surface could be related to wettability alteration. In this work, conditions under which oil adheres to a particular solid surface are demonstrated for several crude oils. For a given oil, pH and ionic strength were varied to obtain a mapping of conditions under which adhesion occurs. Results were satisfactorily explained by double-layer calculations in combination with the ionizable surface group model. Lack of adhesion signifies the presence of a stable water film that results from double-layer repulsion between the crude oil and the solid surface.
A refined structural model for in situ oil sands is proposed in terms of the mutual arrangement of sand grains, fines, water and bitumen. In the Athabasca deposit, the sand grains consist mainly of quartz and their packing is such that the porosity is about 35%. In rich oil sand, 10–15% of the pore space is occupied by connate water whereas the remainder is occupied by bitumen. For lower grade oil sands, a direct correlation exists between the water content and the amount of fines (particles smaller than 44 μm) and an inverse correlation exists between the bitumen content and the amount of fines. These relationships are successfully explained in terms of the irreducible water saturation in a porous medium and the double layer interaction between sand and bitumen surfaces.
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