Answer:
Operators raise this question frequently, and for good reason. With conventional chemical water‑shutoff or EOR treatments, back‑production of unreacted or degraded chemicals is a well‑known operational risk — leading to fouling of surface equipment, destabilisation of oil‑water separation, and costly interference with produced‑water treatment. The industry has learned to treat this as a critical screening criterion for any chemical technology.
For PDS, the evidence is clear: no back‑production of PDS components has been observed, and the physico‑chemical design of the system makes such release highly unlikely.
1. Pre‑treatment compatibility verification
Prior to any field campaign, operators conduct a rigorous compatibility programme using actual formation fluids, representative core material, and the specific production chemicals already in use on the asset. These tests systematically confirm that:
- the PDS components and the flocculated system are fully compatible with the reservoir environment,
- no adverse reactions occur that could later mobilise the barrier,
- the integrity of the surface processing chain is preserved.
In every case, the results have been positive.
2. Post‑treatment field monitoring
Following PDS injection, extensive surveillance programmes have been executed to detect any chemical breakthrough at responding production wells. In one well‑documented instance, a Well Test unit was deployed directly on the producing well to continuously analyse all produced fluids after treatment. No PDS components were detected at any point. This absence of chemical carryover has been consistently reported across multiple fields and treatment types — both in injector‑based EOR applications and in producer‑based water‑shutoff jobs.
3. Physico‑chemical basis for zero back‑production
The permanent retention of PDS deep in the formation rests on three interdependent mechanisms that effectively eliminate any chemical mobility towards producers.
- Floc growth to trapping dimensions
The two injected components — a low‑viscosity polymer solution and a dispersed particulate suspension — are designed to remain mobile separately. Upon contact with formation water in the swept thief zone, controlled flocculation is triggered. The resulting aggregates are engineered to grow well beyond the diameter of the local pore throats or fracture apertures. What was originally a suspension of sub‑pore‑sized particles becomes a network of flocs that simply cannot pass through the tightest constrictions of the rock. - Adsorption locking onto the rock surface
The flocculated polymer chains carry functional groups that form strong physico‑chemical bonds with the mineral surfaces of the reservoir rock — hydrogen bonding, electrostatic attraction, and in some cases ligand exchange with carbonate or clay surfaces. This creates an adhesive anchor that holds the floc mass firmly in place. The process is spontaneous and thermodynamically favourable; once adsorbed, the flocs resist detachment under the low‑velocity, low‑shear conditions that prevail in the reservoir away from the wellbore. - Mechanical entrapment and deep‑bed filtration
Simultaneously, the oversized flocs become physically lodged in pore‑throat constrictions and fracture pinch‑points. The porous medium behaves exactly like a high‑efficiency depth filter: particles are progressively captured as they travel, until no mobile fraction remains. Because the flocs are both adsorbed and mechanically wedged, they are immobilised by two separate mechanisms that reinforce each other.
The reservoir thereafter functions as a massive, permanent filter. The pressure gradients that drive oil and water through the matrix are far too low to dislodge the combined adsorptive‑mechanical barrier. Any residual mobility of the PDS barrier is negligible, and the system remains fixed in place throughout the productive life of the treatment — delivering long‑term conformance control without ever returning to the surface.
Conclusion
The combination of positive compatibility tests, negative field‑monitoring data (confirmed by Well Test analysis), and a robust mechanistic understanding gives operators high confidence that PDS does not pose a chemical back‑production risk. Surface facilities, separation processes, and water‑treatment systems continue to operate without interference — a distinct advantage over many competing chemical technologies.
