In‐situ gelled acids are used for acid diversion in heterogeneous carbonate reservoirs. However, most of the gelled systems are based on anionic polymers that are difficult to clean up after the acid treatments. Residual polymer deposition leads to formation damage by blocking pore throats in the matrix. This work evaluates a new cationic‐polymer acid system with self‐breaking ability for application as an acid diverter in carbonate reservoirs.

Experimental studies have been conducted to examine the rheological properties of these polymer‐based acid systems. The apparent viscosities of the live and the partially neutralized acids at pH from 0 to 5 were measured against the shear rate (0 to 1000 s−1). The effects of salinity and temperature (80 to 250°F) on the rheological properties of the acid system were also studied. The viscoelastic properties of the gelled acid system were evaluated using an oscillatory rheometer. Dynamic sweep tests were used to determine the elastic (G′) and viscous (G″) moduli of the system. Single‐coreflood experiments were conducted on Indiana limestone cores to study the nature of diversion caused by the polymer‐acid system. The effect of permeability contrast on the process of diversion was investigated by conducting dual‐coreflood experiments on Indiana limestone cores that had permeability contrasts of 1.5 to 20. Computed tomography (CT) scans were conducted to study wormhole propagation after acid injection for both single and dual cores.

The live acid system displayed a non‐Newtonian shear‐thinning behavior with the viscosity declining as temperature increased. For 5 wt% hydrochloric acid (HCl) and 20 gal/t polymer content at 10 s−1, the viscosity decreased from 230 to 40 cp as the temperature increased from 88 to 250°F. Acid‐spending tests demonstrated that the acid generated a gel with improved viscosity of 260 cp (at 250°F and 10 s−1) after it reached a pH of 2. The highly viscous gel plugged the wormhole and forced the acid that followed to the next higher‐permeability zone. The viscosity of the gel continued to increase until it broke down to 69 cp (at 250°F and 10 s−1) at a pH of 4.8, which indicates a self‐breaking system and more thorough cleanup potential. Coreflood studies indicated that the wormhole and the diversion process are dependent on the temperature and the flow rate. There was no indication of any damage caused by the system. The injected acid pore volume to breakthrough (PVBT) decreased from 2.2 to 1.4 when the temperature increased from 150 to 250°F.

The strong elastic nature of the gel (G′ = 3.976 Pa at 1 Hz) formed by the partially neutralized acid system proves its suitability as a candidate for use as a diverting agent. This new acid‐polymer system has significant promise for use in acid diversion to improve stimulation of carbonate reservoirs.

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