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Toluene Depletion in Produced Oil Contributes to Souring Control in a Field Subjected to Nitrate Injection
79
Citations
25
References
2011
Year
EngineeringMm TolueneNitrate BreakthroughDesulfurizationOrganic GeochemistryEnvironmental ChemistryChemical EngineeringBioremediationPetroleum ProductionWater TreatmentEnvironmental MicrobiologyProduced Oil ContributesNitrate InjectionProduced WaterWater QualityToluene DepletionMicrobiological DegradationEnvironmental EngineeringOther PwsEnvironmental RemediationGroundwater Remediation
Souring in the Medicine Hat Glauconitic C field, which has a low bottom-hole temperature (30 °C), results from the presence of 0.8 mM sulfate in the injection water. Inclusion of 2 mM nitrate to decrease souring results in zones of nitrate-reduction, sulfate-reduction, and methanogenesis along the injection water flow path. Microbial community analysis by pyrosequencing indicated dominant community members in each of these zones. Nitrate breakthrough was observed in 2-PW, a major water- and sulfide-producing well, after 4 years of injection. Sulfide concentrations at four other production wells (PWs) also reached zero, causing the average sulfide concentration in 14 PWs to decrease significantly. Interestingly, oil produced by 2-PW was depleted of toluene, the preferred electron donor for nitrate reduction. 2-PW and other PWs with zero sulfide produced 95% water and 5% oil. At 2 mM nitrate and 5 mM toluene, respectively, this represents an excess of electron acceptor over electron donor. Hence, continuous nitrate injection can change the composition of produced oil and nitrate breakthrough is expected first in PWs with a low oil to water ratio, because oil from these wells is treated on average with more nitrate than is oil from PWs with a high oil to water ratio.
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