scholarly journals Rheological properties of crude oils with a high resin and asphaltene content. Effect of an electromagnetic field and modifiers

2006 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 202-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. N. Shiryaeva ◽  
F. Kh. Kudasheva ◽  
R. N. Gimaev ◽  
Ch. Kh. Sagitova
2016 ◽  
Vol 146 ◽  
pp. 96-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina V. Litvinets ◽  
Irina V. Prozorova ◽  
Natalya V. Yudina ◽  
Oleg A. Kazantsev ◽  
Alexey P. Sivokhin

SPE Journal ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 13 (01) ◽  
pp. 48-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver C. Mullins

Summary Tremendous strides have been made recently in asphaltene science. Many advanced analytical techniques have been applied recently to asphaltenes, elucidating many asphaltene properties. The inability of certain techniques to provide correct asphaltene parameters has also been clarified. Longstanding controversies have been resolved. For example, molecular structural issues of asphaltenes have been resolved; in particular, asphaltene molecular weight is now known. The primary aggregation threshold has recently been established by a variety of techniques. Characterization of asphaltene interfacial activity has advanced considerably. The hierarchy of asphaltene aggregation has emerged into a fairly comprehensive picture, essentially in accord with the Yen model with the additional inclusion of certain constraints. Crude oil and asphaltene science is now poised to develop proper structure-function relations that are the defining objective of the new field: petroleomics. The purpose of this paper is to review these developments in order to present a more clear and accessible picture of asphaltenes, especially considering that the asphaltene literature is a bit opaque. Introduction The asphaltenes are a very important class of compounds in crude oils (Chilingarian and Yen 1978; Bunger and Li 1981; Sheu and Mullins 1995; Mullins and Sheu 1998; Mullins et al. 2007c). The asphaltenes represent a complex mixture of compounds and are defined by their solubility characteristics, not by a specific chemical classification. A common (laboratory) definition of asphaltenes is that they are toluene soluble, n-heptane insoluble. Other light alkanes are sometimes used to isolate asphaltenes. This solubility classification is very useful for crude oils because it captures the most aromatic portion of crude oil. As we will see, this solubility defintion also captures those molecular components of asphaltene that aggregate. Other carbonaceous materials such as coal do possess an asphaltene fraction, but that often will not correspond to the most aromatic fraction. Petroleum asphaltenes, the subject of this paper, can undergo phase transitions that are an impediment in the production of crude oil. Fig. 1 shows a picture of an asphaltene deposit in a pipeline; obviously, asphaltene deposition is detrimental to the production of oil. Immediately it becomes evident that different operational definitions apply for the term asphaltene in the field vs. the lab. Indeed, the field deposit is very enriched in n-heptane-insoluble, toluene-soluble materials, but this field asphaltene deposit is not identically the standard laboratory solubility class. It is common knowledge that a pressure drop on certain live crude oils (containing dissolved gas) can cause asphaltene flocculation, the first step in creating deposits that are seen in Fig. 1. Highly compressible, very undersaturated crude oils are most susceptible to asphaltene deposition problems with a pressure drop (de Boer et al. 1995). In depressurization flocculation, the character of the asphaltene flocs is dependent on the extent of pressure drop, suggesting some variations in the corresponding chemical composition (Hammami et al. 2000; Joshi et al. 2001). Comingling different oils can result in asphaltene precipitation that can resemble solvent precipitation. Asphaltenes are hydrogen-deficient compared to alkanes; thus, either hydrogen must be added or coke removed in crude oil refining to generate transportation fuels. Thus, asphaltene content lowers the economic value of crude oil. Increasing asphaltene content is associated with dramatically increasing viscosity, especially at room temperature; again, this is of operational concern. The strong temperature dependence of viscosity of asphaltic materials is one of their important properties that make them useful for paving and coating; application of asphaltic materials is facile at moderately high temperatures, while desired rheological properties are obtained at ambient temperatures.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (16) ◽  
pp. 3084 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aidar Kadyirov ◽  
Julia Karaeva

One of the methods of influence on rheological properties of heavy high-viscosity crude oils is ultrasonic treatment. Ultrasonic treatment allows reducing the viscosity of crude oil and, therefore, reducing the costs of its production and transportation. In this paper, the influence of ultrasonic treatment on the rheological characteristics of crude oil (sample No. 1 API = 29.1, sample No. 2 API = 15.9) was investigated. An experimental method was developed. Experimental studies were carried out using the Physica MCR 102 rheometer. The influence of the intensity and duration of ultrasonic treatment on the viscosity of the initial crude oils was studied for 24 h. In addition, the rheological characteristics of the treated oil were investigated after its natural cooling to 293 K. The results are compared with similar results for thermal heating.


2020 ◽  
pp. 73-80
Author(s):  
Vadim Ivanovich Markin ◽  
Boris Pavlovich Shipunov

The paper presents the results of a study of the rheological properties of agar-agar solutions prepared using water exposed to an electromagnetic field with a frequency of 30 to 170 MHz. The studies were carried out at three temperatures: 25, 35, 45 °С, the concentration varied from 0.1 to 0.7%, and the shear rate varied in the range of 100–1000 s-1. As a result of the study, a distinct influence of the electromagnetic field was found, and the quantitative response depends on the shear rate, solution concentration, temperature and frequency of the electromagnetic field. In the vast majority of cases, a decrease in the viscosity of solutions is observed as a result of exposure to an electromagnetic field. There is practically no quantitative correlation of viscosity changes with frequency. There is a complex picture of the mutual influence of the solution concentration, the frequency of the electromagnetic field, temperature and shear rate when measuring viscosity. The temperature dependence of viscosity for solutions subjected to and not exposed to an electromagnetic field is multidirectional in nature and substantially depends on both the concentration of the solution, the frequency of the electromagnetic field, and the shear rate at which measurements were taken. An explanation of the observed dependencies is proposed, which is based on the two-component agar-agar solutions, which leads to individualization of the changes in the rheological properties determined by agarose and agaropectin, respectively.


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