scholarly journals Experimental study on the performance of emulsions produced during ASP flooding

Author(s):  
Ahmed B. Laben ◽  
Hussain H. Al- Kayiem ◽  
Mohammed A. Alameen ◽  
Javed A. Khan ◽  
Ahmed F. Belhaj ◽  
...  

AbstractASP (Alkaline/Surfactant/Polymer) flooding is one of the most promising techniques that has proven to have successful application in several laboratory and pilot tests. However, the formation of persistent and stable emulsions is one of the associated problems with ASP flooding. The present work investigated the effect of sodium carbonate alkaline, Alpha Olefin Sulfonate (AOS) surfactant, and GLP100 polymer on produced crude oil emulsion. The study was conducted by measuring the emulsion stability in terms of water separation and rag layer volume using a TurbiScan analyzer, the dispersed droplet size using cross-polarization microscopy, the interfacial tension using spinning drop tensiometer, and rheological properties using rheometer. The experimental results have shown that AOS presence increased the emulsion stability only when its concentration is above 100 ppm. Meanwhile, below 100 ppm, the presence of AOS promoted water separation and reduced the rag layer volume. In a less significant manner, a high concentration of sodium carbonate alkali increased the stability of the emulsion. The use of GLP100 Polymer has shown substantial ability in promoting water separation and reducing the rag layer volume to a minimal level. It is believed that the outcomes of this work will aid in developing a suitable destabilization process to enhance the oil–water separation and produced water treatment from ASP flooding in the oil production fields. Further investigations on AS, AP, SP as well as the ASP's combined effect on emulsion stability, droplet size, interfacial tension and rheological properties are highly recommended to support the decision-makers on the EOR implementations with chemical additives.

Polymers ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Huang ◽  
Xiaohui Li ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Cheng Fu ◽  
Ying Wang ◽  
...  

The issue of pipeline scaling and oil-water separation caused by treating produced water in Alkali/Surfactant/Polymer (ASP) flooding greatly limits the wide use of ASP flooding technology. Therefore, this study of the demulsification-flocculation mechanism of oil-water emulsion in ASP flooding produced water is of great importance for ASP produced water treatment and its application. In this paper, the demulsification-flocculation mechanism of produced water is studied by simulating the changes in oil-water interfacial tension, Zeta potential and the size of oil droplets of produced water with an added demulsifier or flocculent by laboratory experiments. The results show that the demulsifier molecules can be adsorbed onto the oil droplets and replace the surfactant absorbed on the surface of oil droplets, reducing interfacial tension and weakening interfacial film strength, resulting in decreased stability of the oil droplets. The demulsifier can also neutralize the negative charge on the surface of oil droplets and reduce the electrostatic repulsion between them which will be beneficial for the accumulation of oil droplets. The flocculent after demulsification of oil droplets by charge neutralization, adsorption bridging, and sweeping all functions together. Thus, the oil droplets form aggregates and the synthetic action by the demulsifier and the flocculent causes the oil drop film to break up and oil droplet coalescence occurs to separate oil water.


1978 ◽  
Vol 18 (06) ◽  
pp. 409-417 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.T. Wasan ◽  
S.M. Shah ◽  
N. Aderangi ◽  
M.S. Chan ◽  
J.J. McNamara

Original manuscript received in Society of Petroleum Engineers office Sept. 20, 1977. Paper accepted for publication June 2, 1978. Revised manuscript received Aug. 2, 1978. Paper (SPE 6846) was presented at SPE-AIME 52nd Annual Fall Technical Conference and Exhibition, held in Denver, Oct. 9-12, 1977. Abstract Results of experiments on the coalescence of crude oil drops at an oil-water interface and interdroplet coalescence in crude oil-water emulsions containing petroleum sulfonates and cosurfactant as surfactant systems with other chemical additives were analyzed in terms of interracial viscosity, interfacial tension, interfacial charge, and thickness of the films surrounding the microdroplets. A qualitative correlation was found between coalescence rates and interfacial viscosities; however, there appears to be no direct correlation with interfacial tension. New insight has been gained into the influence of emulsion stability in tertiary oil recovery by surfactant/polymer flooding in laboratory core tests. We concluded that those systems that result in relatively stable emulsions yield poor coalescence rates and, hence, poor oil recovery, Introduction The ability of the surfactant/polymer system to initiate and to propagate an oil bank is the single most important feature of a successful tertiary oil-recovery process. The mechanisms of oil-bank formation and development are yet unknown. It has been suggested that without the initiation of the oil bank, the process behaves more like the unstable injection of a surfactant solution alone, where the oil is produced by entrainment or emulsification in the flowing surfactant stream. In a laboratory study of the initial displacement of residual hydrocarbons by aqueous surfactant solutions, Childress and Schechter and Wade observed that those systems that spontaneously emulsified and coalesced rapidly yielded better oil recovery than those systems that spontaneously formed stable emulsions. Recently, Strange and Talash, Whitley and Ware, and Widmeyer et al. reported results of Salem (IL) low-tension, water-flood tests that used Witco TRS 10-80 TM petroleum sulfonate surfactant solution. They found stable oil-in-water emulsions at the observer well in addition to emulsion problems at the production well and reported that problems at the production well and reported that actual oil recovery was about one-quarter the target value. These studies clearly suggested that poor efficiency of oil recovery results from emulsion stability problems in the low-tension surfactant or micellar processes. Vinatieri presented results of experiments on the stability of crude-oil-in-water emulsions that coo be produced during a surfactant or micellar flood. More recently, we have assessed the rigidity of interfacial films and its relationship to coalescence rate through measurements of interfacial viscosities of crude oils contacted against aqueous solutions containing various concentrations of surfactants and other pertinent chemical additives. Our data clearly indicate that in the absence of a commercial surfactant, interfacial viscosity builds up rapidly, coalescence is inhibited, and the resulting emulsion is quite stable. These phenomena also have been observed by Gladden and Neustadter. Several studies were conducted on the structure of film-forming material at the crude oil/water interface, its effect on emulsion stability, and the role of such films in oil recovery by water or caustic solution displacements. Rigid films were found to reduce the amount of oil recovered. Our studies also have shown that the addition of a commercial surfactant lowered both the interfacial viscosity (ISV) and interfacial tension (IFT) of the crude oil-aqueous solution system. However, the concentration at which both the IFT and ISV are minimized cannot be identified by measuring IFT alone. We have conducted a cinephotomicrographic examination of spontaneous emulsification and a microvisual study of the displacement of residual crude oil by aqueous surfactant solutions in micromodel porous media. SPEJ P. 409


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-176
Author(s):  
Eldha Sampepana ◽  
Paluphy Eka Yustini ◽  
Aditya Rinaldi ◽  
Amiroh Amiroh

Surfactant which is used as raw emulsifier in an industry activity such as Sodium Lauryl Sulfonate is a raw material import, it is petroleum derivative which is not renewable and may cause pollution to the environment, because it is not degraded and are carcinogenic. The purpose of the research is to compare the characteristics of the Quaternary methyl ester sulfonat (MES) and Sodium Lauryl Sulfonat (SLS) as emulsifier. First, make the MES by filtering and eliminating fatty acids of palm oil, then process the MES with enzymatic method become methyl ester, then react it in sulfonation and metanolization process, and also neutralized with NaOH. Next, the MES experiment is compared with SLS and existing MES in the market. The results show that surfactants MES experiment has value hidrofil lipofil balance (HLB) interfacial tension and emulsion stability greater than MES in the market and SLS. And the surface tension of MES experiment is larger than MES in the market, but smaller compared to SLS.ABSTRAKSurfaktan yang digunakan sebagai bahan baku emulsifer dalam aktivitas suatu industri pada saat ini seperti Sodium Lauril Sulfonat  merupakan bahan baku import yang merupakan turunan dari minyak bumi, dengan sifat tidak dapat diperbaharui dan dapat menimbulkan pencemaran terhadap lingkungan karena tidak mudah terdegradasi serta bersifat karsinogenik. Metil ester sulfonat dari bahan minyak sawit merupakan surfaktan dengan sifat mudah terdegradasi yang perlu diketahui karakteristiknya. Penelitian bertujuan untuk membandingkan karakteristik surfaktan metil ester sulfonat (MES) dan Sodium Lauril Sulfonat (SLS) sebagai bahan emulsifier. Mula-mula dilakukan pembuatan MES dengan cara menyaring dan menghilangkan asam lemak minyak sawit terlebih dahulu, kemudian diolah menjadi metil ester secara enzimatis, lalu direaksikan secara sulfonasi dan metanolisis, serta dinetralkan dengan NaOH. Selanjutnya MES hasil percobaan dibandingkan dengan SLS dan MES yang ada dipasaran. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa surfaktan MES memiliki nilai hidrofil lipofil balance (HLB) tegangan antar muka dan stabilitas emulsi lebih besar apabila dibandingkan dengan MES di pasaran dan SLS, kecuali nilai stabilitas emulsi antara MES dan SLS sama. Dan tegangan permukaan MES hasil percobaan, lebih besar dibandingkan dengan MES dipasaran, dan lebih kecil dibandingkan dengan SLS. Kata kunci :   Metil  ester sulfonat, hidrofil lipofil balance, emulsifier, sodium lauril sulfonat , stabilitas emulsi 


Polymer ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 44 (5) ◽  
pp. 1681-1687 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y.T Sung ◽  
M.S Han ◽  
J.C Hyun ◽  
W.N Kim ◽  
H.S Lee

Author(s):  
Берик Картанбаевич Саяхов ◽  
Александр Геннадьевич Дидух ◽  
Гульнара Амангельдиевна Габсаттарова ◽  
Марат Давлетович Насибулин ◽  
Жасулан Канатович Наурузбеков

На начальных участках магистрального нефтепровода Узень - Атырау - Самара формируются партии низкозастывающих бузачинских и высокозастывающих мангышлакских нефтей. По маршруту транспортировки осуществляются дополнительные подкачки нефтей с различными физико-химическими и реологическими характеристиками, что может оказывать существенное влияние на свойства перекачиваемых нефтесмесей. Цель настоящей работы - исследование физико-химических и реологических свойств бузачинской и мангышлакской нефтесмесей на маршруте поставки Узень - Атырау, а также диапазона и причин изменений характеристик бузачинской нефти (основной в компонентном составе нефтесмесей, перекачиваемых по нефтепроводу Узень - Атырау - Самара). По результатам исследований установлено, что свойства мангышлакской нефтесмеси изменяются в незначительных пределах. Для бузачинской нефтесмеси свойственна нестабильность реологических параметров, которые могут изменяться в широком диапазоне в результате путевой подкачки на различных участках нефтепровода. Колебания реологических параметров наиболее показательных проб партий бузачинской нефтесмеси рекомендуется учитывать для решения задач повышения текучести высоковязких нефтей и оптимизации технологических режимов работы трубопроводов, по которым осуществляется перекачка таких нефтей. Методами газохроматографического анализа молекулярно-массового распределения тугоплавких парафинов и поляризационной микроскопии определена температура нагрева бузачинской и мангышлакской нефтесмесей, оптимальная для ввода депрессорной присадки. At the initial sections of the Uzen - Atyrau - Samara main oil pipeline, batches of low pour point Buzachinsky and high pour point Mangyshlak oils are formed. Additional pumping of oils with different physical, chemical and rheological characteristics is carried out along the transportation route, which can have a significant effect on the properties of the pumped oil mixtures. The purpose of this study is to examine the physical, chemical and rheological properties of Buzachi and Mangyshlak oil mixtures on the Uzen - Atyrau supply route, as well as the range and causes of changes in the characteristics of Buzachinsky oil (the main oil mixture in the blend composition pumped through the Uzen - Atyrau - Samara pipeline). According to the research results, it was found that the properties of the Mangyshlak oil mixture vary within insignificant limits. The Buzachinsky oil mixture is characterized by instability of rheological parameters, which can vary in a wide range as a result of route pumping at different pipeline sections. Fluctuations of the rheological parameters of the most indicative samples of batches of the Buzachinsky oil mixture are recommended to be taken into account in order to increase the fluidity of high-viscosity oils and optimize the process modes of operation of pipelines through which such oils are pumped. Using the methods of gas chromatographic analysis of the molecular weight distribution of high-melting-point paraffins, as well as polarization microscopy, the optimal heating temperature for the introduction of a pour point depressant into the Buzachinsky and Mangyshlak oil mixtures has been determined.


2012 ◽  
Vol 36 (5) ◽  
pp. 543-550 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clitor Junior Fernandes de Souza ◽  
Edwin Elard Garcia Rojas

This work characterizes the emulsifying properties of systems containing egg yolk (0.1; 1.0 and 2.5 % w/v) and polysaccharides (xanthan gum, carrageen, pectin and carboxymethylcellulose) and three different vegetable oils (sunflower, canola, and palm oils). Emulsifying activity and emulsion stability were measured of each combination and it was found the effect of the oil on emulsion stability correlated to the amount of monounsaturated fatty acid. Additionally, increased egg yolk concentration increased emulsifying activity by reducing coalescence of oil droplets. Lastly, 2.5% egg yolk and 0.2% polysaccharide generated emulsions with high emulsifying activity, excellent stability, and droplet size of 4.32 µm.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Robert Farrell ◽  
Dario Marcello Frigo ◽  
Gordon Michael Graham ◽  
Robert Stalker ◽  
Ernesto Ivan Diestre Redondo ◽  
...  

Abstract Fouling of heat exchangers and production of stable emulsions in desalting units can present significant challenges in refinery operations. Often these difficulties occur due to the concurrent processing of two or more crude oils that are incompatible under process conditions. This paper describes a significant development in laboratory techniques for studying these issues and evaluating mitigation strategies. Asphaltenes compatibility was evaluated for oil mixtures that may be co-processed in the refinery using a deposition flow rig, and the results were compared with those obtained with more conventional tests: blending stability analysis by light scattering and various screening methods. The flow rig mimics the process conditions (elevated pressure, high temperature, flow-induced shear) and identifies whether deposition or precipitation will occur. The former can cause fouling of heat exchangers whereas the latter produces solids that can stabilize emulsions in the desalter. By varying the proportions of oils that were co-injected into the deposition flow rig, the range within which mixtures were unstable was found. By flowing through a capillary (to mimic a heat exchanger) and in-line filter, it was possible to identify whether precipitation of suspended flocs or fouling of the heat exchanger itself was the likely issue for each mixture. Emulsion-stability tests were conducted using a pressurized rig with an ersatz separator to mimic the desalting unit; results were compared with those obtained in conventional, ambient-pressure bottle tests. Oil(s) and refinery wash water were injected, mixed under representative shear, and allowed to separate within the typical residence time of the desalter. Chemical additives were tested to identify those that were effective at controlling any observed problems. Results obtained in either flow rig (using representative pressure, temperature, and shear) did not always match those obtained using conventional methods. Asphaltenes fouling occurred under conditions where it was not predicted by screening tests that were conducted at conditions not representative of the process and did not occur under conditions where it was predicted. Differences were also observed between the emulsion stability observed in bottle versus rig tests, though these should be viewed as complementary techniques. This paper presents new laboratory techniques for the prediction and prevention of refinery fouling and emulsion stability. They mimic conditions in the facilities much better than those typically used to date.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhe Sun ◽  
Xiaodong Kang ◽  
Shanshan Zhang

Abstract In recent years, ASP flooding has been widely applied and obtained the remarkable effect. During the ASP flooding process, the oil composition has a great effect on the interfacial tension, which plays a vital role in the oil displacement effect. However, through literature research, few have made a profound study on the effect of oil composition on the recover rate. As a result, it is very important to carry out relevant research. For the oil sample (I) and sample (II) from two different regions in DQ, the crude oil composition analysis is first carried out. After the mixing of oil system and ASP system, the distribution ratio of agent is obtained. Furthermore, the oil composition does have an impact on the interfacial tension and recovery rate, and its influence law is explored. Finally, its application is introduced and analyzed. Research results show that, compare with sample (II), the sample (I) has more heavy components. After the mixing of oil samples and ASP, more surfactant and alkali enters into the oil phase of sample (I). Therefore, based on the similar miscibility principle, the surfactant is more likely to leave the oil water interface and enter into the oil phase of sample (I), which has a negative effect on reducing the interfacial tension. Furthermore, the phenomenon of chromatographic separation aggravates the adsorption of surfactant on rock surface. Therefore, combining the above factors, the oil increment effect of sample (I) becomes worse. In additional, the results of field test verify the laboratory experiments. From the above research, we canconclude that the relationship between crude oil composition and ASP flooding is of great significance. As a result, this paper has carried out a lot of related research work and revealed the internal relationship between the two, which has important practical significance to improve the effect of increasing oil and reducing water in ASP flooding technology.


Soft Matter ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (24) ◽  
pp. 5650-5658
Author(s):  
Jinmei Lei ◽  
Yuxia Gao ◽  
Xu Hou ◽  
Zhizhi Sheng ◽  
Chenhui Zhang ◽  
...  

Schematic showing the influence of dilational rheological properties on the emulsion stability and solid–liquid interfacial interaction.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document