Carbon Dioxide Enhanced Oil Recovery

Course Number: O-2005
Credit: 2 PDH
Subject Matter Expert: Edward P. Brunet, Jr., P.E.
Price: $59.90 Purchase using Reward Tokens. Details
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Overview

In Carbon Dioxide Enhanced Oil Recovery, you'll learn ...

  • The benefits and limitations of carbon dioxide (CO2) enhanced oil recovery (EOR)
  • Why injecting CO2 into the pore spaces of a rock helps move crude oil out
  • The physical elements of a typical CO2 flood operation
  • Real-world examples of how a field can respond to CO2 injection

Overview

PDHengineer Course Preview

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Credit: 2 PDH

Length: 22 pages

When an oil reservoir is first produced, the pressure that exists in the subsurface provides the energy for moving the oil, gas and water that is in the rock to the surface. After a while, the pressure dissipates and pumps must be used to remove additional volumes of oil. Depending on the characteristics of the rock and the oil, a considerable amount of the original oil in place may be left behind (perhaps 60 percent or more) as residual oil.

As the production decline phase begins, it is carefully managed to extract every last drop of oil possible using enhanced oil recovery techniques, such as waterflooding and CO2injection. Where CO2enhanced recovery operations are employed, they typically take place after the less expensive waterflooding option has already been implemented, although the remaining oil saturation in the post-waterflood reservoir is still significant, perhaps 50 percent of the original oil in place.

In a typical CO2flood operation, a pipeline delivers the CO2to the field at a pressure and density high enough for the project requirements and a meter is used to measure the volume of gas purchased. This CO2is directed to injection wells strategically placed within the pattern of wells to optimize the areal sweep of the reservoir. The injected CO2enters the reservoir and moves through the pore spaces of the rock, encountering residual droplets of crude oil, becoming miscible with the oil, and forming a concentrated oil bank that is swept towards the producing wells.

This course provides a brief introduction to the physics of CO2 EOR, the fundamental engineering aspects of its application, and the conditions under which it can be successfully implemented.

Specific Knowledge or Skill Obtained

This course teaches the following specific knowledge and skills:

  • When and why CO2 EOR is needed
  • How the CO2 EOR process works
  • The benefits of CO2 relative to other EOR options
  • Properties of CO2
  • Criteria for screening reservoirs for CO2 EOR suitability
  • The effectiveness of CO2 EOR using real-world, historical examples
  • CO2 availability and anthropogenic CO2 sources
  • The future potential of CO2 projects
  • Environmental considerations associated with CO2 EOR

Certificate of Completion

You will be able to immediately print a certificate of completion after passing a multiple-choice quiz consisting of 10 questions. PDH credits are not awarded until the course is completed and quiz is passed.

Board Acceptance
This course is applicable to professional engineers in:
Alabama (P.E.) Alaska (P.E.) Arkansas (P.E.)
Delaware (P.E.) District of Columbia (P.E.) Florida (P.E. Area of Practice)
Georgia (P.E.) Idaho (P.E.) Illinois (P.E.)
Illinois (S.E.) Indiana (P.E.) Iowa (P.E.)
Kansas (P.E.) Kentucky (P.E.) Louisiana (P.E.)
Maine (P.E.) Maryland (P.E.) Michigan (P.E.)
Minnesota (P.E.) Mississippi (P.E.) Missouri (P.E.)
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PDHengineer Course Preview

Preview a portion of this course before purchasing it.

Credit: 2 PDH

Length: 22 pages

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