Literature DB >> 22704814

Coreflood assay using extremophile microorganisms for recovery of heavy oil in Mexican oil fields.

Gladys Castorena-Cortés1, Teresa Roldán-Carrillo, Jesús Reyes-Avila, Icoquih Zapata-Peñasco, Martha Mayol-Castillo, Patricia Olguín-Lora.   

Abstract

A considerable portion of oil reserves in Mexico corresponds to heavy oils. This feature makes it more difficult to recover the remaining oil in the reservoir after extraction with conventional techniques. Microbial enhanced oil recovery (MEOR) has been considered as a promising technique to further increase oil recovery, but its application has been developed mainly with light oils; therefore, more research is required for heavy oil. In this study, the recovery of Mexican heavy oil (11.1°API and viscosity 32,906 mPa s) in a coreflood experiment was evaluated using the extremophile mixed culture A7, which was isolated from a Mexican oil field. Culture A7 includes fermentative, thermophilic, and anaerobic microorganisms. The experiments included waterflooding and MEOR stages, and were carried out under reservoir conditions (70°C and 9.65 MPa). MEOR consisted of injections of nutrients and microorganisms followed by confinement periods. In the MEOR stages, the mixed culture A7 produced surface-active agents (surface tension reduction 27 mN m⁻¹), solvents (ethanol, 1738 mg L⁻¹), acids (693 mg L⁻¹), and gases, and also degraded heavy hydrocarbon fractions in an extreme environment. The interactions of these metabolites with the oil, as well as the bioconversion of heavy oil fractions to lighter fractions (increased alkanes in the C₈-C₃₀ range), were the mechanisms responsible for the mobility and recovery of heavy oil from the porous media. Oil recovery by MEOR was 19.48% of the residual oil in the core after waterflooding. These results show that MEOR is a potential alternative to heavy oil recovery in Mexican oil fields.
Copyright © 2012 The Society for Biotechnology, Japan. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22704814     DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiosc.2012.05.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biosci Bioeng        ISSN: 1347-4421            Impact factor:   2.894


  8 in total

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4.  An Exogenous Surfactant-Producing Bacillus subtilis Facilitates Indigenous Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery.

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6.  Sophorolipids Production by Candida bombicola ATCC 22214 and its Potential Application in Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery.

Authors:  Abdulkadir E Elshafie; Sanket J Joshi; Yahya M Al-Wahaibi; Ali S Al-Bemani; Saif N Al-Bahry; Dua'a Al-Maqbali; Ibrahim M Banat
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7.  Laboratory Investigation of Indigenous Consortia TERIJ-188 for Incremental Oil Recovery.

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8.  Low-Abundance Dietzia Inhabiting a Water-Flooding Oil Reservoir and the Application Potential for Oil Recovery.

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  8 in total

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