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Title:
METHODS OF OIL AND GAS PRODUCTION USING WASTE WATER FROM WATER PURIFICATION PROCESSING
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2008/079217
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
The further processing of waste water from water purification yields products that are used in oil and gas well drilling and production.

Inventors:
GROTT GERALD J (US)
Application Number:
PCT/US2007/025812
Publication Date:
July 03, 2008
Filing Date:
December 17, 2007
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
GROTT GERALD J (US)
International Classes:
A47B43/00; C02F1/00; C02F1/42; C02F1/68; C02F5/00
Foreign References:
US6651383B22003-11-25
US2552775A1951-05-15
US3022824A1962-02-27
US3826311A1974-07-30
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
DRUMMOND, William, H. (La Quinta, CA, US)
Download PDF:
Claims:

1. In oil or gas well drilling or production, the improvement comprising the steps in combination of

collecting contaminated water having 0.15% or more by weight of the salts of Na, Ca, Mg, K, Cl, SO 4 or CO 3 or combinations thereof,

separation processing said contaminated water to produce a first separated substantially solid or liquid product and a second separated substantially solid or liquid product, and

using one of said products in oil or gas well drilling or production

2. In oil or gas well drilling, the improvement comprising the steps in combination of

collecting contaminated water having 0.15% or more by weight of the salts of

Na, Ca, Mg, K, Cl, SO 4 or CO 3 or combinations thereof,

separation processing said contaminated water to produce a first separated substantially solid or liquid product and a second separated substantially solid or liquid product, and

adding one of said products to a drilling fluid as a weighting agent.

3. In oil or gas well drilling, the improvement comprising the steps in combination of:

(a) collecting contaminated water having 0.15% or more by weight of the salts of Na, Ca, Mg, K, Cl, SO 4 or CO 3 or combinations thereof;

(b) separation processing said contaminated water to produce

a first separated substantially solid or liquid product having increased sodium chloride and decreased magnesium chloride and calcium chloride or combinations thereof than the collected water and

a second substantially solid or liquid product having decreased sodium chloride and increased magnesium chloride and calcium chloride or combinations thereof than the collected water,

(c) using said first separated product in mixing a salt saturated cement; and

(d) using said cement in a drill hole casing.

4. In oil or gas well production, the improvement comprising the steps in combination of:

(a) collecting contaminated water having 0.15% or more by weight of the salts of Na, Ca, Mg, K, Cl, SO 4 or CO 3 or combinations thereof;

(b) separation processing said contaminated water to produce a first separated substantially solid or liquid product, said first separated product having increased sodium chloride and decreased magnesium chloride and calcium chloride or combinations thereof than the collected water

and

(c) injecting said first waste product into an oil or gas well formation to improve production.

Description:

METHODS OF OIL AND GAS PRODUCTION USING WASTE WATER FROM WATER PURIFICATION PROCESSING

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to methods of oil and gas production using waste waters produced from water purification processing.

Water purification processing typically produces a first effluent of relatively "clean water" and a second effluent of "waste water" which includes undesired contaminants. For example, the softening of hard water by the removal of calcium and magnesium is required for both industrial and household use.

Known water softening processes proceed either by way of ion-exchange, membrane softening or precipitation. In the ion-exchange processes, the divalent calcium and magnesium ions are exchanged for monovalent sodium and regeneration of the ion-exchange resin is achieved with a large excess of sodium chloride. This processes creates a regeneration effluent that is a relatively concentrated aqueous solution of sodium, calcium and magnesium chlorides which normally has to be discarded. Alternatively, it is possible to use weak acid resins which exchange hydrogen ions for calcium and magnesium ions, and to regenerate the spent resins with a mineral acid. While this method creates less waste water, it is more expensive and yields relatively acidic soft water which is corrosive. Membrane softening concentrates the calcium, magnesium salts and salts of other divalent ions to produce waste waters which require costly disposal. The precipitation process has traditionally been carried out by the "lime soda" process in which lime is added to hard water to convert water soluble calcium bicarbonate into water-insoluble calcium carbonate. This process also results in waste water which is difficult to filter and requires cumbersome equipment.

Thus, the disposal of waste water has become an expensive problem for society. For example, approximately 1.61 billion gallons of waste water containing approximately

800,000 tons of mixed sodium, calcium, magnesium chlorides and sulfates is produced from water treatment operations and oil fields in the state of California alone. Disposing of this waste water costs millions of dollars each year. The disposal of waste water has become even more problematic in other parts of the world and billions of dollars are spent each year toward disposal efforts. It would be highly advantageous to provide economic uses of salty waste waters in ways that salvage and use the salt contents, thus to provide a benefit to society.

Farmland and irrigation water is often unacceptably high in sodium. Irrigation waters containing high amounts of sodium salts versus calcium and/or magnesium salts can create a buildup of sodium in the soil. This excess soil results in the dispersion of soil colloidal particles and an increase in soil pH. The dispersion of colloidal particles causes the soil to become hard and compact when dry and increasingly resistant to water infiltration and percolation. The sodium rich soil also becomes resistant to water penetration due to soil swelling when wet. The total salinity of soil and irrigation water is also of concern. Salinity refers to the total salts within the water, with the significant positive ions (cations) in salinity being calcium, magnesium and sodium and the significant negative ions (anions) being chloride, sulfate and bicarbonate.

All irrigation water contains some dissolved salts. When soil has a high content of dissolved salts, or the irrigation waters have sufficient salts to increase the salinity of the soil, the soil has the tendency to hold the water instead of releasing the water for absorption by plant roots by osmotic pressure. Even if the soil contains plenty of moisture, plants will wilt because they cannot absorb necessary water.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Briefly, in accordance with the invention, I provide improvements in oil or gas well drilling or production. These improvements provide for beneficial, economic use of waters that previously could only be discarded.

In one embodiment, the improvement comprises the steps, in combination, of collecting contaminated water having 0.15% or more by weight of the salts of Na, Ca, Mg, K, Cl, SO 4 or CO 3 or combinations thereof, separation processing the contaminated water to produce a first separated substantially solid or liquid product and a second separated substantially solid or liquid product, and adding one of these products to a drilling fluid as a weighting agent.

In another embodiment of the invention, the improvement comprises the steps in combination of collecting contaminated water having 0.15% or more by weight of the salts of Na, Ca, Mg, K, Cl, SO 4 or CO 3 or combinations thereof, separation processing the contaminated water to produce a first separated substantially solid or liquid product having increased sodium chloride and decreased magnesium chloride and calcium chloride or combinations thereof than the collected water and a second substantially solid or liquid product having decreased sodium chloride and increased magnesium chloride and calcium chloride or combinations thereof than the collected water, using the first separated product in mixing a salt saturated cement and using the cement in a drill hole casing.

In yet another embodiment of the invention, the improvement comprises the steps in combination of collecting contaminated water having 0.15% or more by weight of the salts of Na, Ca, Mg, K, Cl, SO 4 or CO 3 or combinations thereof, separation processing the contaminated water to produce a first separated substantially solid or liquid product having increased sodium chloride and decreased magnesium chloride and calcium chloride or combinations thereof than the collected water and a second substantially solid or liquid product having decreased sodium chloride and increased magnesium chloride and calcium chloride or combinations thereof than the collected water, and injecting the first waste product into an oil or gas well formation to improve production.

The waste waters used in the present invention are any waters which are produced as a result of the purification of water, and particularly purified oil field produced waters and purified irrigation drainage. Such purification or "separation" processes result in a first

effluent of clean water and a second effluent of a waste water which, typically, must be discarded. Examples of such separation processes include reverse osmosis, electro dialysis, distillation, evaporation, ion exchange and lime softening. These processes create waste water products having various levels of salt content. For the purposes of this invention, I define "waste water" as water containing about 0.15% or more by weight of the salts of Na, K, Ca, Mg, Fe, Cl, SO4, and CO3 or a combination thereof. Prior to the practice of my invention, disposal of the waste water from any of these processes was expensive.

The present invention involves processing of waste waters to produce products which are useable in within the oil industry, improving the economics of oil/gas drilling/production, while, simultaneously reducing the economic and environmental costs of waste water disposal.

In particular, I have discovered that the water softening of waste waters produced from oil field operation produces two effluents, both of which can be used for oil field applications. For practicing this embodiment of the invention, oil field waste water is "water softened" to produce a first "clean" effluent having increased sodium and potassium and a second regenerate effluent having increased calcium and magnesium.

Because oil field waste waters tend to have substantially high salt contents, even the "clean" effluent will typically have a salt content of 0.15% by weight or more of salt. Accordingly, the clean water would ordinarily be too salty for use and would have to be discarded. However, according to my invention, the first effluent from separation processing (water softening) of oil field waters is used: 1) as a weighting agent for drilling muds, 2) as an additive for cement for fabricating oil well casings, and 3) for injection into an oil well drill site formation for maintaining fluid pressure in a process called "water flooding". The regenerate brine, typically having a salt content of 3.0% or greater, is also useful as a weighting agent for drilling muds.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Fig. 1 is a flow sheet depicting a preferred method of the invention directed to the use of the products from water purification processes for the oil industry including for use as an Enhanced Oil Recovery Fluid;

Fig. 2 is a flow sheet of another preferred method of the invention directed to the use of the products from water purification processes for the oil industry including for use as an Enhanced Oil Recovery Fluid;

Fig. 3 is a flow sheet of another preferred method of the invention directed to the use of the products from water purification processes for the oil industry including for use as an Enhanced Oil Recovery Fluid;

Fig. 4 is a flow sheet of another preferred method of the invention directed to the use of the products from water purification processes including in multiple heat exchangers used in the oil industry; and

Fig.5 is a flow sheet of another preferred method of the invention directed to the use of the products from water purification processes including within power plant turbines, as an emulsifier and when reopening capped wells in the oil industry.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Water softening removes the "hardness" from the water which means, predominantly, removing or altering the calcium and magnesium ions from the water. These calcium and magnesium ions combine with carbonates, sulfates, oils and fats to create bathtub scum, spotted dishes, gray sheets, etc. In addition, unsoftened water has

been found to cause scaling of industrial water heaters and commercial boilers, causing early substantial energy losses through impaired heat transfer and early shutdown for the removal of scale. Several methods for effecting water softening are known.

The best known process for softening water is "ion-exchange." Ion-exchange entails the exchange of sodium, which is introduced into water, for calcium, magnesium, iron and other divalent mineral ions which are transferred out of the water and into a resin. When the resin approaches saturation with these "hard" ions, the resin is regenerated most often with solutions of sodium chloride producing an effluent containing 3 to 25% sodium, calcium and magnesium salts which must be discarded. The exact concentration of the effluent depends on the shop practice and, in particular, on the amount of rinse water included in the effluent, if any. Less often mineral acids like sulfuric acid or hydrochloric acid are used for water softening and these also produce effluents. Conversely, "reverse" water softening involves ion exchange in which calcium and magnesium are introduced into the water to separate sodium.

Membrane systems have recently become economically feasible. These systems, such as electro-dialysis and reverse osmosis, include the use of a membrane which also produces a salty effluent. For critical uses such as electronics, and particularly for use in the manufacture of computer chips, the first product of clean water may be further purified by dual bed or mixed bed ion-exchange treatment. This "polishing treatment" also produces a waste effluent containing the removed salts. Each of these water purifying processes produce a clean water effluent and a waste-water effluent which is expensive and difficult to discard.

For the purposes of this application, "waste water" is defined as any water containing sufficient salts as to have no acceptable use due to costs or contamination levels. In general, waste water containing about 0.15% or more by weight of the salts of Na, K, Ca, Mg, Fe, Cl, SO4, and CO, or combinations thereof, are considered as having no acceptable use and must be discarded.

The water separation processes are believed to have particular usefulness for oil and gas drilling, and accordingly, the following is described with particular emphasis to oil and gas drilling. However, the water separation processes of the present invention have broad application throughout various drilling industries including for use with wells drilled for water, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, natural gas, and oil.

Contaminants not ordinarily found in other waster waters are common in produced waters from oil and gas wells. Waste water from oil and gas wells most often contain metals in higher amounts than in waste waters from other sources. The high volume uses of waters such as for water flooding and the use of formulated solutions for enhanced oil and/or gas recovery, have further restrictions on those cations like calcium and magnesium and the anions like bicarbonate, carbonate and sulfate that can combine to form solids that hinder oil and/or gas recovery, particularly at temperatures of 300° F and higher.

The challenges for recycling are such that a report from the Department of Petroleum Engineering, Texas A&M, states that of the 390 million gallons per day of excess produced water in the Permian Basin, only 1% is re-used and the remaining 350,000,000 gallons per day goes to disposal using re-injection wells. It would be highly beneficial if useful water products and materials could be recovered from these waters.

Despite the above described challenges, the products from purification of waste waters, including waste waters produced from oil and gas wells themselves, have extensive applications in the oil recovery industry. It has also been discovered that where the oil or natural gas is produced from deeper formations, there is often enough heat available from the produced water, oil, and/or natural gas to materially improve the efficiency and the economics of recycling as compared with disposal as wastes.

Additionally, the remote locations of many oil and gas resources add premium value to local recycling by minimizing the energy use and time delays in transportation of materials to the drill site or production area and the costs associated with waste disposal without

damaging the ecology. One geographical example for recycling is the use of centralized drilling areas and drilling platforms where first drilled wells may be producing waste water even while other wells are being drilled. In addition to the waste waters from the producing wells, there are waste waters from the purification of local brackish water or seawater for potable and end uses and, except for hazardous wastes, much or even all of these saline waste waters may be recycled instead of being discharged to waste disposal.

Described in general terms, with reference to Figs. 10 - 14, an embodiment of the present invention includes collecting the initial contaminated water having 0.15% by weight or more of salts of Na, Ca, K, Mg, Fe, Cl, SO4, CO2, and combinations thereof. The waste water is separation processed in which the amount of salts in the effluents does not change, but the monovalent chloride salts are separated from multivalent chloride salts. Preferably subsequent to testing for hazardous materials, the waste water is separated to produce two effluents.

Where the initial contaminated water has a relatively low sodium content, it is possible that this water may be used for potable use. Where the contaminated water has exceedingly high sodium or high overall salt content, which is typical of waste waters produced from oil recovery, the first effluent will typically have a salt content, such as 0.15% or much greater, which is not acceptable for use as drinking water. However, it has been discovered that this first effluent in its initial liquid state, or further concentrated to even a substantially solid salt state, can be used for various applications in the oil industry.

Produced water from oil and gas wells are typically high in the chloride salts of sodium, calcium, and magnesium, with lesser amounts of potassium salts and sulfate salts. The chloride salts have wide use in drilling oil and gas wells, while carbonate and sulfate anions can form troublesome precipitates with calcium and/or magnesium. After testing for and the removal of hazardous or otherwise detrimental materials, one or more separation processes are chosen to preferentially separate the sodium and potassium chlorides as brine or solids from calcium and magnesium chlorides or other multivalent salts.

I have discovered that the mixed calcium and magnesium chlorides are suitable as weighting agents in drilling fluids for wells. I have also found that calcium chloride, after removal of magnesium by precipitation using lime, is effective when used to accelerate the setting of cement. I have further discovered that the mixed sodium and potassium chlorides are suitable for use as weighting agents in drilling fluids.

In addition, when there is a possibility for drilling through salt formations, the sodium and/or potassium chlorides may be used to saturate the water in the drilling fluid so as to avoid dissolving salt from the formation and thereby maintain control of the hole diameter.

When a salt saturated cement is required for cementing the casing where it passes through formations containing sodium and potassium salt, the mixed sodium-potassium solutions produced from separation processing can be used in mixing cement. In operation, the sealing is accomplished by preparing a salt saturated cement using sodium-potassium chlorides from separation processing. The volume of salt saturated cement required to completely fill the annulus between the well casing and the walls of the drill hole is calculated, and typically an extra 15 - 30% volume is mixed, without sand or gravel. The entire amount is then pumped into the top of the well casing. At this point much of the salt saturated cement has passed through the casing and has risen in the annulus from the bottom up. Thereafter, a rubber plug of a diameter larger than the casing inside diameter is inserted into the top of the casing and a valve and fitting are attached to the top of the casing. Water is pumped in above the rubber plug under sufficient pressure to force the rubber plug to near the bottom end of the casing, the cement resumes its travel out of the bottom of the casing and up the annulus between the drill hole and casing. Again, the water volume is calculated so that the plug is not forced out of the bottom of the casing which leaves enough cement in the casing to seal from formation pressure when the casing cap is removed and drilling or well completion resumed. As the salt saturated cement moves up the annulus, it forces the "drilling mud" ahead of it and out of the top of an annulus at ground level. The volume of cement itself

is such that a copious amount follows the drill mud out at the surface, as proof that circulation of the cement is complete. The cement is allowed to set and any excess cement inside the casing is drilled out.

The first product produced from water separating the waste water has additional uses in the oil industry. For example, it has been discovered that the sodium and/or potassium-rich effluent is useful for injection into an oil well formation to maintain fluid pressure. The injection of water into an oil well formation to maintain fluid pressure is also referred to as "water flooding," and is called a secondary recovery process. This long standing practice has commonly used waters produced from oil and gas wells with minimal, if any, changes in composition. It has been discovered that the effectiveness of produced water from oil and gas wells and also other waste waters for "water flooding" can be substantially improved. To this end, the waste waters are collected and tested to determine if it is sufficiently free of hazardous materials. The waste water is then processed by traditional methods to separate the waste water into a first effluent containing the sodium and potassium (if any) salts and substantially free of calcium and magnesium. The second effluent contains very little sodium salts but contains essentially all of the calcium and magnesium in the original waste water. While produced water from oil wells contains mostly chloride salts, the use of waste waters from other sources, and particularly the membrane concentrate from desalination, most often contains enough sulfate ion to combine with calcium in the original formation water to form a precipitate of gypsum that can plug the formation and reduce oil recovery. After removal of substantially all of the calcium and magnesium, the now "separated water" has an improved wetting power as compared to the originally "hard" waste water.

When this first effluent with low sulfate ion is used in "water flooding" it also effectively and simultaneously removes calcium and magnesium from the formation. This has been discovered to be of great assistance in tertiary recovery of oil, often called "enhanced oil recovery." Typically following the end of cost-effective water flooding, the amount of oil remaining in place is from 45% to 65 % of the original oil in the formation, and recovery of additional oil from the formation is desirable.

One type of tertiary recovery uses "chemical flooding," where the injection fluid contains one or more surfactants to remove oil from formation pores and surfaces, often by forming an emulsion. The sodium chloride content of the injection fluid is typically maintained above 0.9 % for lowest surface tension achievable with sodium chloride alone. Alternately, the salty water, rich in sodium chloride, functions as the base for the additions of chemicals such as surfactants and/or polymers for enhanced oil recovery. In still another preferred embodiment, about 0.01% - 25% of the sodium chloride is processed by electrolysis to convert part of the sodium chloride to sodium hypochlorite before injection into the oil well formation. Sodium hypochlorite has a greater wetting power for introduction into and through porous oil formations. The greater wetting power reduces the energy required for pumping into the formation, thereby requiring less energy. In addition, the sodium hypochlorite is itself a surfactant and reduces the amount of more costly surfactants that are required for economically enhanced oil recovery.

The various uses within the oil industry for the first effluent produced from separation processing of waste waters are described above. However, it has also been discovered that waste water from separation processing , including water produced from oil and gas wells, having a reduced sodium and potassium salts content and increased calcium and magnesium content, can also be used in the oil industry. Typically, this second effluent containing predominantly calcium and magnesium chlorides will have a salty content of 1 % or greater by weight. In addition, this salty brine can be further concentrated by evaporation.

With reference to Figures 1-5, the second product can be either a liquid or substantially solid salt product if subjected to sufficient evaporation, and will have increased calcium and magnesium content compared to the untreated contaminated water. However, this second product containing calcium and/or magnesium is very useful for addition to drilling muds as a weighting agent. When the magnesium content is higher than desired, the magnesium can be precipitated as magnesium oxide, preferably by the addition of lime which

forms additional calcium chloride of increased molecular weight as compared with magnesium chloride. The magnesium chloride is collected and used for treating waste waters to clarify them and reduce the heavy metal content, if any.

Presently, the operation of oil fields typically produces substantial unwanted waste water having 0.15% by weight or greater of the salt of Na, Ca, K, Mg, Fe, Cl, SO4, CO2, or combinations thereof. Previously, this waste water would have to be disposed of at high cost. This high cost would be passed on to the consumer by way of increased oil prices. Now, the waste waters can be water separated "on site" for use in the very same drilling fields. Often the oil field waste waters have salt contents far greater than 0.15% which result in a water separated effluent and a regenerative brine which previously could not be used. Indeed, it is anticipated that the water separating of waste waters collected from an oil field site will typically produce a first effluent having greater than 0.15% by weight of salts, and containing a higher sodium and potassium content, and a second regenerative brine typically having greater than 3.0% by weight of salt and having an increased calcium and magnesium content. However, these products as described above, still have usefulness within the oil industry as weighting agents, cement additives and as flooding waters.

The use of waste waters produced from oil and gas wells has been described in generality. However, the waste waters produced from oil and gas wells have a very wide variety of waste products including various salts and metals. One example of variability is produced water from coal bed methane wells in the Great Plains area of the U.S. As reported by U.S. Geological Survey, the total dissolved solids (TDS) in the alkaline water from coal bed methane wells varies from 270 to 2400 mg./l in the Fort Union coal beds alone. A second example is waters from three natural gas wells each producing from one of three separate production zones in an area of Northern Mexico. The rate of gas production is declining and it is common for produced water from oil or gas wells to be re-injected into a producing formation to maintain or increase the formation pressures that move product to the surface. A report on the evaluation of the use of reinjection for these wells states, "...The primary concern for this study is the potential for solids(scales) to form in the well bore

region as well as in the production equipment." The study required chemical analyses and computation of the scaling index at the temperatures in the formation to determine feasibility. The temperature of water from one well is reported as 275 °F with salinity and alkalinity as 30,597 mg/1 with 8.9 pH and alkalinity as 1039 mg/1 bicarbonate and a high scaling factor. Water from the well with highest salinity measures 282 ° F and 69,534 mg/1 TDS, 7.6 pH, with alkalinity of 66 mg/1 bicarbonate and a lower scaling factor, but still positive for scaling.

Traditional practice for reducing the scaling potential of waters for re-injection has been to use either or both lime-soda processing and/or additions of one of the many proprietary anti-sealant chemicals. Apparently, these practices were not considered to be feasible for the Norhern Mexico location. A computer simulation was made to see if mixing the waste waters would make an injection brine with an acceptable scaling index, but no mixing ratio that would avoid unacceptable scaling could be found. While consideration of re-injection was dropped and while disposal of the produced waters may not yet be economically recycled for re-injection, valuable water, brines, and salt for use in drilling and operating other wells can be recovered for use in an area where these products are in short supply.

These variations in waste water constituents require the use of various methods of water purification and use which may be selected and practiced according to flow sheets illustrated in Figs. 1-5 that are specific to the local conditions. Testing by chemical and/or mechanical separation for oil, suspended solids, and metals as well as the more common chloride, sulfate, carbonate and bicarbonate salts of sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium and iron is preferred for the selection of water purification processes, and their sequence of use, so as to ascertain the optimum point in the flow sheet for the removal of contaminants to levels safe for the intended use.

For example, one of the preferred methods of processing and using waste waters produced from oil fields is illustrated in Fig. 1, which illustrates a general example of the process of the present invention for analyzing local conditions of waste waters to select the

best practice of the present invention. A first step in the process may include testing of the waste waters for oil, hazardous materials and salt content. Depending upon the results of such analysis, contaminants may be removed as shown in one of the paths shown in Fig. 1. However, in the first stage separation, salts of monovalent cations, predominantly sodium and potassium, are separated from salts of multivalent cations, predominantly calcium and magnesium. Thus, calcium and magnesium chlorides are concentrated in a reduced volume of solution. This allows the removal of metals by precipitation, by the addition of high pH hydroxides, preferably lime, as either calcium oxide or calcium hydroxide, and/or sodium hydroxide, or potassium hydroxide.

It is well known that the floes of precipitated magnesium hydroxide aid in the settling of co-precipitated metal hydroxides and other particulates. The use of lime is preferable because the cost is lower than for sodium or potassium hydroxide and the use of lime produces a weight of calcium chloride greater than the reduction in weight of magnesium chloride.

Having noted that a wide range of analyses and a wide range of recycled products can be produced, Fig. 1 is presented as a generalized flow sheet. Typically these processes are cost competitive with evaporation up to about 15,000 mg/1 TDS but again, local conditions are the determining factor.

Fig. 2 illustrates an additional embodiment of the invention which is preferably practiced where the waste waters possess constituents different than those processed in Fig. 1. In Fig. 2, the brine from Permian Basin is used as an example. After evaporation in solar ponds to crystallize the monovalent sodium and potassium chlorides and reduce their content preferably to about 1 % or less, the recovered sodium chloride, here described as the first effluent, will total about 62,500 tons/year. The remaining brine, here described as the second effluent, will contain 5,160 of calcium -magnesium chlorides at a concentration of 37-39% plus about 500 tons of sodium chloride. This concentration is near the highest practical working concentration, because of the influence of temperature on the solubility of calcium

and magnesium chloride, where even slight drops in temperature below 60°F causes hydrates to form and settle in pumps, piping, valves and containers. Where transportation requires reduced weights, additional evaporation can be carried out to remove essentially all of the sodium chloride and to produce hydrates of calcium chloride containing up to 80% calcium chloride.

The crystalized sodium chloride is suitable for all of the uses of common solar salt, including weighting of drilling fluids, making salt saturated brine for drilling through salt formations and making salt saturated cement for securely sealing casing penetrating salt formations. When this salt is purified, preferably according to my U.S. Patent No. 5,300,123, the purified salt low in calcium and magnesium is particularly well suited for conversion to concentrations of sodium hypochlorite preferably of more than 0.1 % and up to 12-15% sodium hypochlorite which reduces the surface tension of injected fluids to permit the fluid to enter passages in the formation too small for penetration by liquids of higher surface tension, and to free additional oil from surfaces of the formation, and to reduce the power required for pumping. This salt low in calcium and magnesium has particular use in sodium separating water of up to 10,000 ppm to below 10 ppm hardness and is suited for use in preflushing calcium and magnesium from a formation prior to the use of surfactants and/or polymers in enhanced oil recovery that require sodium chloride.

Fig. 3 is a flow-sheet illustrating disposal and use of the produced water from natural gas wells such as those found in Northern Mexico. Gas production is reported as 1.66 MM cubic feet/day and water produced is 2646 bbl/day (111,00 gallons/day). The temperature of the gas and produced water as it exits the wellhead, recorded from the three wells as 275 "F, 282°F and 282°F, makes it beneficial to reduce the temperature of the gas before entering the pipelines and condense the water. The latent heat in the natural gas and produced water at the well head and before pipelining, is sufficient that, when the produced water has been collected to maintain a working reserve, from that point on the evaporation of produced water by the latent heat in the produced gas and water is sufficient to evaporate substantial amounts of purified water for collection as condensate suitable for potable uses or for irrigation in an

area where water is scarce. This evaporation using waste heat simultaneously increases the concentration of the salts in the brine preparatory to solar evaporation. Brine cooled in the evaporation ponds can also be used to cool the gas-water mix. The sodium chloride and calcium chloride brine recovered will replace products imported from great distance at a large expenditure of energy and the volume of waste for disposal is greatly reduced.

Fig. 3 illustrates a process substantially similar to that shown in Fig. 11. However, the process shown in Fig. 3 provides greater specificity as to the use of evaporation for the separation of the salts of multivalent cations from the salts of the monovalent cations. This process adds the simultaneous and beneficial use of the waste brine in cooling the well head fluids while simultaneously using the heat from the well head fluids for the evaporation, whether in ponds or other evaporators.

Fig. 4 illustrates an additional example of use of a heat exchanger in the water processes of the present invention for using waste heat in well head fluids. Simultaneously, cooling well head fluids are dewatered (the removal of liquid water) using sequential heat exchange for regenerating absorbent materials. Preferably, calcium chloride is used for the sequestration of water. For temperatures between 275°F and 282°F, ethylene glycol may be used as an absorbent. In Fig. 4, the heat exchanger is particularly useful where the oil or gas well has a warmer well head, such as above 220 °F, which can be used to evaporate waste waters to concentrate calcium chloride. The partially cooled well head fluids are then passed through the second heat exchanger (evaporator) shown in Fig. 4 for a second stage cooling with a corresponding increase in evaporation. Fig. 4 also illustrates the production of calcium chloride hydrate or anhydrous salt for use in dehydrating natural gas or other petroleum products. Although not shown in Fig. 4, the water vapor from the first evaporator can be condensed for further use.

Fig. 5 illustrates the processing and uses of the effluents from deionization by ion exchange. The use of deionization by manufacturers of electronics and medicines is already well known and increasing rapidly. Typically, regeneration is done with expensive

hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide. Only a part of these materials is consumed and the remainder creates a problem in disposal. So, common practice is for these two materials to be mixed for mutual neutralization. Additional acid or sodium hydroxide is added as required to adjust the pH of the solution of waste salts acceptable for discharge to a sewer or brine line. This results in a waste of materials typically containing as much as half of the original hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide. At the same time, large volumes of hydrochloric acid are used in removing scale from oil well equipment and in producing formations, and particularly so when the oil or gas well has been capped for an extended period of time. Many oil and gas wells have increased volumes of produced water in the form of a high water/oil or water /gas ratio in the later stages of production. Often the cost of disposal of produced water makes production unprofitable and periods of low energy prices cause many wells to be capped.

With reference to Product B in Figure 5, most often the analysis of the water in the formation is favorable for the precipitation of calcium and/or magnesium compounds that are deposited as "scale". When this continues, over time the formation, the piping, and pumping equipment lose capacity to carry the oil and water. Reopening of capped wells often requires removal of the scale and the most used material is a solution of hydrochloric acid which dissolves scale. But many formations contain clays which will swell and plug the formation unless the acid is mixed with a material that keeps the clays from swelling, such as phosphoric acid or an excess of sodium salts. The regeneration brine from the strong acid cation resins used in removing cations by deionization is such a solution and typically requires only dilution with water before use.

With reference to Product C in Fig. 5, the regeneration brine for strong base resins used in removing anions during deionization is most often sodium hydroxide, though it may be potassium hydroxide or even ammonium hydroxide, as described in my pending U.S.

Patent Application Serial No. 11/495,979 filed July 28, 2006 which is incorporated herein by reference. The residual hydroxide in the spent regeneration brine is highly effective when used as an addition to water flooding as a wetting agent that allows better penetration of

formations and/or when used at strengths that strip crude oil from formation surfaces by emulsification. The suitability for water softening is particularly important as the greatest single salt use in California is for softening water for steam-assisted production of heavy oil. Such "steam assist" is used in production of more than 145,000,000 barrels / year, nearly half of California on-shore oil production. Use of surfactants and emulsions for Enhanced oil recovery also requires use of softened water to minimize surfactant use. Increasing oil prices makes steam-assist practices more economical and the recovery of waste salts further reduces costs for the increased recovery.

Having disclosed my invention in such detail as to enable those skilled in the art to understand and practice it, and having identified the presently preferred embodiments thereof, I CLAIM: