Abstract
The evolution of techniques required to mobilize reservoir fluids at critical saturation is important because of global petroleum needs because of the necessity to conserve the underground water that deteriorated because of the slowness of persistent organic pollutants' dismantling. The acoustic waves of low-frequency are one of these methods, but the absence of understanding of the vibration effect to displace Oil prevents vibration application in the field until recently. This paper proves that oil permeability increased when the vibration induced in porous media; vibration makes resorting to the rock grains, which stimulates passage for liquid moving through the reservoir. The capillary pressure and reservoir pressure should be taken into consideration to make optimum validation for vibration stimulation.
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This article (and all articles in the proceedings volume relating to the same conference) has been retracted by IOP Publishing following an extensive investigation in line with the COPE guidelines. This investigation has uncovered evidence of systematic manipulation of the publication process and considerable citation manipulation.
IOP Publishing respectfully requests that readers consider all work within this volume potentially unreliable, as the volume has not been through a credible peer review process.
IOP Publishing regrets that our usual quality checks did not identify these issues before publication, and have since put additional measures in place to try to prevent these issues from reoccurring. IOP Publishing wishes to credit anonymous whistleblowers and the Problematic Paper Screener [1] for bringing some of the above issues to our attention, prompting us to investigate further.
[1] Cabanac G, Labbé C and Magazinov A 2021 arXiv:2107.06751v1
Retraction published: 23 February 2022