scholarly journals The effects of temperature and acid number of crude oil on the wettability of acid volcanic reservoir rock from the Hailar Oilfield

2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quan Xie ◽  
Shunli He ◽  
Wanfeng Pu
1982 ◽  
Vol 22 (02) ◽  
pp. 245-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.F. deZabala ◽  
J.M. Vislocky ◽  
E. Rubin ◽  
C.J. Radke

Abstract A simple equilibrium chemical model is presented for continuous, linear, alkaline waterflooding of acid oils. The unique feature of the theory is that the chemistry of the acid hydrolysis to produce surfactants is included, but only for a single acid species. The in-situ produced surfactant is presumed to alter the oil/water fractional flow curves depending on its local concentration. Alkali adsorption lag is accounted for by base ion exchange with the reservoir rock. The effect of varying acid number, mobility ratio, and injected pH is investigated for secondary and tertiary alkaline flooding. Since the surface-active agent is produced in-situ, a continuous alkaline flood behaves similar to a displacement with a surfactant pulse. This surfactant-pulse behavior strands otherwise mobile oil. It also leads to delayed and reduced enhanced oil recovery for adverse mobility ratios, especially in the tertiary mode. Caustic ion exchange significantly delays enhanced oil production at low injected pH. New, experimental tertiary caustic displacements are presented for Ranger-zone oil in Wilmington sands. Tertiary oil recovery is observed once mobility control is established. Qualitative agreement is found between the chemical displacement model and the experimental displacement results. Introduction Use of alkaline agents to enhance oil recovery has considerable economic impetus. Hence, significant effort has been directed toward understanding and applying the process. To date, however, little progress has been made toward quantifying the alkaline flooding technique with a chemical displacement model. Part of the reason why simulation models have not been forthcoming for alkali recovery schemes is the wide divergence of opinion on the governing principles. Currently, there are at least eight postulated recovery mechanisms. As classified by Johnson and Radke and Somerton, these include emulsification with entrainment, emulsification with entrapment, emulsification (i.e., spontaneous or shear induced) with coalescence, wettability reversal (i.e., oil-wet to water-wet or water-wet to oil-wet), wettability gradients, oil-phase swelling (i.e., from water-in-oil emulsions), disruption of rigid films, and low interfacial tensions. The contradictions among these mechanisms apparently reside in the chemical sensitivity of the crude oil and the reservoir rock to reaction with hydroxide. Different crude oils in different reservoir rock can lead to widely disparate behavior upon contact with alkali under varying environments such as temperature, salinity, hardness concentration, and pH. The alkaline process remains one of the most complicated and least understood. It is not surprising that there is no consensus on how to design a high-pH flood for successful oil recovery. One theme, however, does unify all present understanding. The crude oil must contain acidic components, so that a finite acid number (i.e., the milligrams of potassium hydroxide required to neutralize 1 gram of oil) is necessary. Acid species in the oil react with hydroxide to produce salts, which must be surface active. It is not alkali per se that enhances oil recovery, but rather the hydrolyzed surfactant products. Therefore, a high acid number is not a sufficient recovery criterion, because not all the hydrolyzed acid species will be interfacially active. That acid crude oils can produce surfactants upon contact with alkali is well documented. The alkali technique must be distinguished from all others by the fundamental basis that the chemicals promoting oil recovery are generated in situ by saponification. SPEJ P. 245^


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed Almadhaji ◽  
Mohammed Saeed ◽  
Hitham Ibrahim ◽  
Anas Ahmed ◽  
Ragaei Maher

Abstract One of Sudanese fields has a heavy crude oil which has a high Total Acid Number (TAN) and high viscosity, can cause a lot of problems in production operation, transport, and storage facilities. The effect of ethanol dilution on the rheological properties of crude (especially the kinematic viscosity) was studied and presented. Moreover, the consequence of blending Trona (NaHCO3.Na2CO3) with a specified amount of Ethanol in the crude can reduce (TAN) to acceptable limits for solving corrosion and flowability problems. The approach is based on the experiments and laboratory works on the crude's samples after blending with a certain amount of Trona and Ethanol. It depends on the results of apparatuses, that are used to measure the samples, for instance, Calibrated glass capillary viscometer and ASTM D664 titration volume Total Acid Number tester which are employed to get the values of kinematic viscosity and TAN, respectively. The tests are established with crude have kinematic viscosity (187 cst) at temperature 75°C and TAN almost (8.51). While increasing the dosage of Trona at the ambient temperature (38°C) with the certain mass percentage of Ethanol (5%), TAN is decreased from (8.51 to 4.00 mgKOH/g). Also, the kinematic viscosity is declined from (187 cst to 96.75 cst) after increasing the volume of Ethanol at 75°C. These outcomes indicated that Ethanol could reduce Sudanese heavy crude's viscosity, and the Trona could decrease the TAN. This reduction occurred due to Ethanol dilution. The Ethanol molecules disturb the molecular structure of the crude, which forms polar bond within the hydrocarbon chain that leads to lower the friction between molecules of hydrocarbon in the crude. Also, Trona shrinks TAN because the Hydroxide ions (OH+) that founded in Trona neutralize the Hydrogen ions (H−) in Naphthenic acid in Sudanese heavy crude. This study can be summarized in the ability to solve the difficulty of transporting and processing the heavy crude oil in refineries; maintains the quality of the crude while utilizing it with friendly environmental materials and low cost.


Author(s):  
Opeyemi Lawal ◽  
Solomon A. Adekola ◽  
Akinsehinwa Akinlua

AbstractCrude oil and produced water samples obtained from ten wells in an offshore field, Niger Delta, were analyzed, in order to determine the occurrence of naphthenates deposition in the field. Total acid number (TAN) and °API of the crude oil samples, pH and metal ions concentrations of the produced water samples were determined. The results revealed that TAN values ranged from 0.47 to 1.01 mgKOH/g with pH of 6.9–8.9, which were above established threshold. The metal ions concentrations especially for Ca++ and Na+ were relatively high. These imply a high possibility of metal-naphthenate precipitation in the oil production facilities in this field.


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (5) ◽  
pp. 343-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeed Ashtari Larki ◽  
Hooman Banashooshtari ◽  
Hassan Shokrollahzadeh Behbahani ◽  
Adel Najafi-Marghmaleki

2015 ◽  
Vol 1107 ◽  
pp. 79-84
Author(s):  
Norshahidatul Akmar Mohd Shohaimi ◽  
Jafariah Jaafar ◽  
Wan Azelee Wan Abu Bakar

Oil is one of the most important energy sources for the world and will likely remain so for many decades, even in the most optimistic projection about the growth of alternative energy sources. Petroleum industry nowadays faced a problem when the naphthenic acid (NA) compound naturally present in the acidic crude oil tends to induce corrosion in oil refining process. Total Acid Number (TAN) represent the amount of naphthenic acid in the oil with the permissible limit of TAN in crude oil is less than 1. Various methods had been used to remove NA in crude oil such as dilution and caustic washing. But all methods have their own weakness. Hence, in order to overcome the acidic crude oil problem, a new catalytic deacidification technique will be introduced in this study. Three types of crude: Petronas Penapisan Melaka Heavy Crude (Crude A) and Light Crude (Crude B) and Korean Crude (Crude C) were studied. Parameters studied were dosing amount of basic chemical used, catalyst calcination temperature, and percentage of the basic chemical in the co-solvent. The basic chemical used in this study was ammonia solution in ethylene glycol (NH3-EG). By using Ca/Al2O3 catalyst with calcination temperature of 10000C, the results showed 66.7% (1000 mg/L of NH3-EG) reduction in TAN for crude A, 53.9% reduction for crude B while for crude C the percentage of TAN reduction was 41% only. Addition of Cu as a dopant in this study had increased the TAN reduction for all three types of crude oil. TAN in crude A (80% of TAN reduction) and crude B (77% of TAN reduction) were successfully reduced to less than 1 with only using 1000 mg/L of NH3-EG with the aids of Cu/Ca (10:90)/Al2O3 catalyst at calcination temperature of 10000C while for crude C the TAN was still higher than 1 but the percentage of TAN reduction increased to 46%.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daulet Magzymov ◽  
Torsten Clemens ◽  
Bettina Schumi ◽  
Russell T. Johns

1978 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 161
Author(s):  
B. Bubela

The forthcoming decrease in availability of known, presently economical deposits of crude oil in the foreseeable future, makes it imperative that the search for new oil deposits be intensified and the present methods of oil recovery be improved or new ones introduced. From the work reported in the literature it is obvious that microbiology may play a significant role in both cases. Among many parameters influencing oil recovery, viscosity of the oil and the surface tension between the rock, oil and water are of great importance. Microorganisms growing in the reservoir produce gases and surfactants, which may, to some extent, regenerate the endogenous energy of the reservoir and facilitate movement of the crude oil to the well. The composition of the crude oil may become altered by biodegradation of asphaltic, napthenic and/or paraffinic components of the oil. The fraction being biodegraded varies according to the microbiological population present. In general terms mixed populations are more effective in biodegradative processes and production of surfactants. A combination of sewage microorganisms and reservoir microorganisms adapted to 95°C and high pressure, was found satisfactory. Molasses is a suitable supplementary substrate for the growth of such a mixed population. A decrease of viscosity of oil, resulting from biological degradation, may be a composite effect of degradation of highly polymerised hydrocarbons, precipitation of asphaltenes and solution of biologically produced gases in the oil. Such biogenic gases dissolved in the reservoir water may, in combination with biologically produced acids, contribute to the slow solution of the sedimentary rock, thus increasing the rock's permeability and facilitating migration of the oil through the reservoir.The biological activity in the reservoir is influenced by a number of parameters (pH, Eh, temperature, pressure, oil-water dispersion, mineralisation). The permeability of the reservoir rock is of primary importance. Rocks of permeability less than 150 md are not suitable for biologically enhanced recovery. Field tests indicate that biological activity in a reservoir may result in a drop of 50 per cent in the oil viscosity, a three-fold increase of oil production over several months, increase in water acidity and additional production of gas with a recorded pressure increase from 2 atm to 27 atm. The area affected by the biological activity depends on the mineralogy and permeability of the reservoir rock, sandstone and limestone of permeability higher than 600 md being most suitable.Further properly controlled and documented laboratory and field experiments are urgently required before the feasibility of microbiologically enhanced oil recovery can be firmly established.


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