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Bacteria and
Oil Production
A funded project that my students
and I are working on is an investigation of bacteria in subsurface
hydrocarbon reservoirs. Over 50% of original oil in place in the
United States is still in the ground and cannot be recovered economically
with today's technology. Most of this is in economically vulnerable
wells classified as marginal. Without economic enhanced oil recovery
(EOR) technologies this resource is at risk of being abandoned forever.
Waterflooding is by far the most widely used EOR technology, producing
over half of U.S. oil. It is estimated that 50-75% of all fields
have been or will be waterflooded.
Microbial permeability profile modification (MPPM) involves adding
nitrogen- and phosphorus-containing microbial nutrients to the injection
water of a conventional waterflood operation. The nutrients stimulate
growth of in situ microbes, not injected microbes, diverting water
flow from more porous zones to unswept zones, increasing waterflood
sweep efficiency. It is a reservoir process, not just treatment
of individual wells. Since the nutrients are commonly used plant
fertilizers and only microbes already present in the reservoir are
involved, it is a very environmentally friendly process. Compared
to other EOR technologies it is a relatively low cost method.
MPPM has been successfully applied at Hughes Eastern Corp.'s North
Blowhorn Creek Unit (NBCU) in Lamar County, Ala. Production is from
Mississippian-age Carter sandstone at a depth of about 2,300 ft.
The process has extended the economic life of the field 5-11 years
past normal waterflooding and generated ~$350,000 in taxes and royalties
with potential for $1.3-1.9 MM. The incremental cost of the MPPM
was $1.32 per barrel. MSU and MPPM has received a prestigious Hart's
Oil and Gas Award, and has been recognized by the Secretary of Energy.
Our research deals with understanding the relationships between
the bacteria and the rocks in order to help us better understand
the MPPM process.
Scanning electron microscopic preservation techniques for bacteria
indigenous to the NBCU have been tested. Five techniques were tested,
including air drying, 10% glutaraldehyde fixation, standard ethanol
dehydration with hexamethyldisilazane, ethanol dehydration with
critical point drying, and ethanol/acetone dehydration with critical
point drying. Ethanol dehydration and critical point drying preserved
the bacteria but greatly changed the morphology of the associated
polysaccharide capsule (Fig. 1). Air-drying and glutaraldehyde fixation
preserved the polysaccharide biofilm, but bacteria were distorted
or collapsed. Our conclusion is that an accurate investigation requires
two samples, one preserved by glutaraldehyde fixation for characterization
of the biofilm, and one by ethanol dehydration for examination of
the bacterial bodies themselves.
Several experiments have been performed on NBCU bacteria and rocks.
In the first experiment, sandstone samples were inoculated with
indigenous NBCU bacteria from a laboratory culture and incubated
for two weeks. SEM examination of the samples showed a polysaccharide
slime layer forming an irregular but continuous sheet that draped
across sand grains and stretched across pore throats and crevices.
Bacteria were uncommon and randomly distributed throughout the samples.
In places, two different morphologies of polysaccharide slime were
present: a beaded, globular layer overlain by a smooth, sheetlike
layer (Fig. 2).

Fig. 1. Web-like morphology of polysaccharide
slime produced by dehydration preservation.
Fig. 2. Grain-coating morphology of polysaccharide slime preserved
by simple air-drying.
In the second experiment small pieces
of live NBCU core were feed with nitrogen- and phosphorus-rich nutrients
on the same schedule as the NBCU cores that have been flow tested.
After two weeks, SEM analysis showed that the sandstone core pieces
were so completely covered with biofilm that the entire mineral
surface was obscured (Fig. 3). Fewer bacteria were observed than
in cultured-bacteria experiments. The speed with which the bacterial
capsule grew and thickly and completely covered the samples was
a surprise. Future experiments with shorter feeding times are in
progress. Other experiments comparing the rate of growth in samples
with dissimilar mineral compositions are also underway.
It has been long debated whether the efficacy of MEOR is due to
pore blockage by bacterial bodies or by polysaccharide capsule.
These experiments suggest that is the polysaccharide slime layer
that is almost entirely responsible for the plugging of sandstone
pores and that this is accomplished not by completely filling the
pore spaces but by stretching across pore throats in a weblike morphology
(Figs. 4, 5, and 6). Our research on MEOR will soon be shifting
gears as we begin an investigation of bacteria in a carbonate reservoir
where acid produced by the bugs will actually increase the porosity
and permeability of the rock. This research is a collaborative effort
with Dr. Lewis Brown in the Dept. of Biological Sciences. Much of
our work is accomplished in the Electron
Microprobe Center at MSU.

Fig. 3. Biofilm completely covering
bacterial bodies and mineral grains.
Fig. 4. Polysaccharide capsule (biofilm) on and between kaolinite
flakes.

Fig. 5. Polysaccharide slime meniscus
partially occluding porosity.
Fig. 6. Sandstone porosity partially filled with polysaccharide
slime.
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