Slow production, preferential recovery of light hydrocarbons,
and
low recovery factors are common challenges in oil production from
unconventional reservoirs dominated by nanopores. Gas injection-based
techniques such as CO2 Huff-n-Puff have shown promise in
addressing these challenges. However, a limited understanding of the
recovery of oil mixtures on the nanopore scale hinders their effective
optimization. Here, we use molecular dynamics simulations to study
the recovery of an oil mixture (C10 + C19) from a single 4 nm-wide
calcite dead-end pore, both with and without CO2 injection.
Without CO2 injection, oil recovery is much faster than
expected from oil vaporization and features an undesired selectivity,
i.e., the preferential recovery of lighter C10. With CO2 injection, oil recovery is accelerated and its selectivity toward
C10 is greatly mitigated. These recovery behaviors are understood
by analyzing the spatiotemporal evolution of C10, C19, and CO2 distributions in the calcite pore. In particular, we show
that interfacial phenomena (e.g., the strong adsorption of oil and
CO2 on pore walls, their competition, and their modulation
of transport behavior) and bulk phenomena (e.g., solubilization of
oil by CO2 in the middle portion of the pore) play crucial
roles in determining the oil recovery rate and selectivity