Free Newsletters - Space - Defense - Environment - Energy
..
. Medical and Hospital News .




ENERGY TECH
Clues to foam formation could help find oil
by Staff Writers
Houston TX (SPX) Oct 15, 2013


In one of two bubble-forming mechanisms discovered at Rice University, a bubble is split before entering a constriction by a neighboring bubble and the wall. The research is part of Rice's effort to understand the creation of foam for enhanced oil extraction and other purposes. (Credit: Biswal Lab/Rice University). For a larger version of this image please go here.

Blowing bubbles in the backyard is one thing and quite another when searching for oil. That distinction is at the root of new research by Rice University scientists who describe in greater detail than ever precisely how those bubbles form, evolve and act.

A new study led by Rice chemical and biomolecular engineer Sibani Lisa Biswal and published in the journal Soft Matter describes two previously unknown ways that bubbles form in foam.

The work should be of interest to those who make and use foam for a variety of reasons, from shaving cream to insulation. But it may be of primary importance to companies trying to extract every possible drop of oil from a reservoir by using volumes of thick foam to displace it.

Biswal and her team used microfluidic devices and high-speed imaging to capture images of how bubbles transform as they pass through tight spaces like those found in permeable rock deep underground. They discovered mechanisms that should help engineers understand how foam can be manipulated for specific tasks.

"In the classic descriptions of bubble formation, there's what we call snap-off, lamella division and leave-behind," Biswal said. Snap-off bubbles are created when liquid accumulates by capillary action in a narrow section of a pore and forms a liquid slug separating two bubbles.

A lamella division bubble happens when the lamella (a thin film of liquid) moves through a branch in the flow path and becomes two lamella. Leave-behind happens when a gas enters two adjoining, parallel pores and the liquid between the two pores thin down to a lamella.

In the newly observed bubble-making processes, which she calls "pinch-off" behaviors, the bubbles form before gas passes through the constriction, not after.

"No one has seen these mechanisms," she said. In one pinch-off, a bubble caught between a neighboring bubble and the wall would split as it entered the channel. In the second, she said, "We found neighboring bubbles that are basically karate-chopping a third one as it tries to go through."

The smaller the bubbles in the foam, the better it may serve enhanced oil recovery, said George Hirasaki, a Rice research professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and co-author of the paper.

"We're trying to understand how foam behaves in porous media because it is a way of making gas act like a more viscous fluid," he said. "Normally, gas has very low viscosity and it tends to flow through rock and not displace oil and water. Once it finds a path, usually along the top of a reservoir, the rest of the gas tends to follow.

"If there were some way to make gas act more like a liquid, to make it more viscous, then it would contact much more of the reservoir and would push the fluids out," Hirasaki said.

Ideally, foam would pack the channels inside high-permeable regions and force pressure to flow through rocks with low permeability, flushing out the hard-to-get oil often trapped there.

The Biswal lab built devices that mimic what happens in porous rock, squeezing mixtures of gas and surfactant through 20 micrometer-wide channels. They filmed what happened under a range of pressures at either end of the channel at 10,000 frames per second.

"Normally we work in rock samples or sand packs and we measure the pressure drop," Hirasaki said. "It's hard to see what's happening at the pore scale. But with the micromodel, we can see it with our own eyes - or with the camera's eye."

"We want to offer the oil industry more mobility control," Biswal said. "What we mean by that is the ability to drive fluids through areas that vary in their permeability. We want fluids to move through the entire path, not just the path of least resistance."

Lead authors are Rice alumna Rachel Liontas, currently a graduate student at Caltech, and former graduate student Kun Ma, currently a reservoir engineer at Total E&P USA. Biswal is an associate professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering.

The Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, the Abu Dhabi Oil R and D Sub-Committee, the Abu Dhabi Company for Onshore Oil Operations, the Zakum Development Co., the Abu Dhabi Marine Operating Company), the Petroleum Institute of the United Arab Emirates and the U.S. Department of Energy funded the research.

Read the abstract here

.


Related Links
Rice Consortium for Processes in Porous Media
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle




Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News





ENERGY TECH
Don't Be Fooled by Libya - This is a Failed State
Washington DC (SPX) Oct 15, 2013
Gunmen have seized Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan from a hotel in central Tripoli, releasing him shortly afterwards, but making it clear that post-Gaddafi Libya is a failed state and that the government is incapable of taking full control over its oilfields and export terminals. While the markets have been responding lately with unfounded optimism over Libya, anyone who has been privy to ... read more


ENERGY TECH
Italy launches sea patrol as Sicily declares emergency

Italy deploys drones, warships after refugee tragedies

Walker's World: Is France turning racist?

India, US trying to hamper Pakistan quake relief: top militant

ENERGY TECH
Plan maps development of China's sat-nav industry

Raytheon completes critical design review for GPS OCX software

Tracking devices to go toe-to-toe with smartwatches

Orbcomm Acquires The SENS Asset Tracking Operation

ENERGY TECH
Hunters and farmers lived side-by-side for 2,000 years

Study suggests women, not men, created much of ancient cave art

Living descendants of 5,300-year-old 'Iceman' identified

Primate brains follow predictable development pattern

ENERGY TECH
Britain's panda 'suffers miscarriage'

Studying the socialside of carnivores

Elephants may understand pointing

Rare mosquito fossil shows female's blood-filled belly

ENERGY TECH
Taiwan looks to first vaccine against fatal H7N9 avian flu

Projected climate change in West Africa not likely to worsen malaria situation

HIV infections plummet since 2001: UN

Disarming HIV With a "Pop"

ENERGY TECH
China officials sentenced in graft suspect drowning

China marks 100 years since birth of Xi's war-hero father

China criticises Spain lawsuit over former president

Chinese official sacked after piggyback to protect his shoes

ENERGY TECH
Somali pirates on trial for seizing French yacht

Accused Silk Road mastermind to be sent to New York for trial

Somali pirate suspects deny 'attack' on Spanish anti-pirate ship: court

US authorities shut Silk Road website, arrest owner

ENERGY TECH
China bank loans pick up in September: central bank

Outside View: Stability operations association meeting opens

US lawmakers split as debt deadline looms

China inflation hits seven-month high in September




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement