Abstract
Long-term water flooding development has exacerbated reservoir heterogeneity, and traditional polymer gels are unable to simultaneously meet the requirements of high injectability and strong plugging strength. If the viscosity of the polymer is high, its injectability will be poor; on the contrary the viscosity is low, the plugging strength will be poor, which severely restricts the oil recovery effect. This study synthesized an NBAP through free radical polymerization followed by a substitution reaction, and a plugging system (NBAP-B1) was subsequently formed by combining the polymer with a Cr(3+) crosslinking agent. Rheological experiments demonstrated that the system exhibited significant shear thinning behavior, as well as excellent temperature and salt resistance. Gelation experiments indicated that the NBAP-B1 system featured controllable gelation time (20~150 h) and high gelation strength (J grade), along with excellent resistance to both high temperature and high salinity. Microscopic analysis revealed that the gel formed by NBAP-B1 possessed a dense and uniform three-dimensional network structure. Injection and plugging experiments demonstrated that NBAP-B1 exhibited optimal injectability and outstanding plugging performance. Additionally, profile control and displacement tests revealed a 18.37% enhancement in oil recovery efficiency by water flooding after the application of NBAP-B1 for conformance control. Collectively, these results demonstrate that the NBAP exhibits significantly superior performance compared to single component systems. It combines excellent injectability with high strength plugging capability, offering an effective approach for enhancing oil recovery in low permeability reservoirs.