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Mobility control is a generic term describing any process by which an attempt is made to alter the relative rates at which injected and displaced fluids move through a reservoir. The objective of mobility control is to improve the volumetric sweep efficiency of a displacement process. In some processes, there is also an improvement in microscopic displacement efficiency at a specified volume of fluid injected. Mobility control is usually discussed in terms of the mobility ratio, M, and a displacement process is considered to have mobility control if M ≤ 1.0. Volumetric sweep efficiency generally increases as M is reduced, and it is sometimes advantageous to operate at a mobility ratio considerably less than unity, especially in reservoirs with substantial variation in the vertical or areal permeability.

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