Influence of ferrous iron on the oxidation of crude oil at a low temperature

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 501-506
Author(s):  
Lei Zhang ◽  
Jing Liu ◽  
Chunsheng Pu ◽  
Cheng Jing ◽  
Liming Zheng
Author(s):  
Ping Guo ◽  
Weiwei Xu ◽  
Shi Tang ◽  
Binxia Cao ◽  
Danna Wei ◽  
...  

One cold-adapted strain, named Planococcus sp. XW-1, was isolated from the Yellow Sea. The strain can produce biosurfactant with petroleum as sole source of carbon at low temperature (4 °C). The biosurfactant was identified as glycolipid-type biosurfactant species by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). It reduced the surface tension of water to 26.8 mN/m with a critical micelle concentration measurement of 60 mg/L. The produced biosurfactant possesses high surface activity at wide ranges of temperature (−18–105 °C), pH values (2–12), and salt concentrations (1–18%). The biosurfactant exhibited higher surface activity and higher growth rate of cells with hexadecane and diesel as carbon source. The strain Planococcus sp. XW-1 was also effective in degrading crude oil, after 21 days of growth at 4 °C in medium with 1% crude oil and 1% (v/v) bacteria broth, 54% of crude oil was degraded. The results suggest that Planococcus sp. XW-1 is a promising candidate for use in the bioremediation of petroleum-contaminated seawater in the Yellow Sea during winter. This study reported for the first time that Planococcus isolated from the Yellow Sea can produce biosurfactant using petroleum as the sole carbon source at low temperature (4 °C), showing its ecological role in the remediation of marine petroleum pollution.


1981 ◽  
Vol 21 (04) ◽  
pp. 480-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
F.M. Orr ◽  
A.D. Yu ◽  
C.L. Lien

Abstract Phase behavior of CO2/Crude-oil mixtures which exhibit liquid/liquid (L/L) and liquid/ liquid/vapor (L/L/V) equilibria is examined. Results of single-contact phase behavior experiments for CO2/separator-oil mixtures are reported. Experimental results are interpreted using pseudoternary phase diagrams based on a review of phase behavior data for binary and ternary mixtures of CO2 with alkanes. Implications for the displacement process of L/L/V phase behavior are examined using a one-dimensional finite difference simulator. Results of the analysis suggest that L/L and L/L/V equilibria will occur for CO2/crude-oil mixtures at temperatures below about 120 degrees F (49 degrees C) and that development of miscibility occurs by extraction of hydrocarbons from the oil into a CO2-rich liquid phase in such systems. Introduction The efficiency of a displacement of oil by CO2 depends on a variety of factors, including phase behavior of CO2/crude-oil mixtures generated during the displacement, densities and viscosities of the phases present, relative permeabilities to individual phases, and a host of additional complications such as dispersion, viscous fingering, reservoir heterogeneities, and layering. It generally is acknowledged that phase behavior and attendant compositional effects on fluid properties strongly influence local displacement efficiency, though it also is clear that on a reservoir scale, poor vertical and areal sweep efficiency (caused by the low viscosity of the displacing CO2) may negate the favorable effects of phase behavior.Interpretation of the effects of phase behavior on displacement efficiency is made difficult by the complexity of the behavior of CO2/crude-oil mixtures. The standard interpretation of CO2 flooding phase behaviour, given first by Rathmell et al. is that CO2 flooding behaves much like a vaporizing gas drive, as described originally by Hutchinson and Braun. During a flood, vaporphase CO2 mixes with oil in place and extracts light and intermediate hydrocarbons. After multiple contacts, the CO2-rich phase vaporizes enough hydrocarbons to develop a composition that can displace oil efficiently, if not miscibly. The picture presented by Rathmell et al. appears to be consistent with phase behavior observed for CO2/ crudeoil mixtures as long as the reservoir temperature is high enough. Table 1 summarizes data reported for CO2/crude-oil mixtures. Of the 10 systems studied, all those at temperatures above 120 degrees F (50 degrees C) show only L/V equilibria while those below 120 degrees F exhibit L/L/V separations (Stalkup also reports two phase diagrams that are qualitatively similar to the other low-temperature diagrams but does not give temperatures). Thus, at temperatures not too far above the critical temperature of CO2 [88 degrees F (31 degrees C)], mixtures of CO2 and crude oil exhibit multiple liquid phases, and at some pressures L/L/V equilibria are observed. It has not been established whether Rathmell et al.'s interpretation of the process mechanism can be extended to cover the more complex phase behavior of low-temperature CO2/crude-oil mixtures. In a recent paper, Metcalfe and Yarborough argued critical temperature CO2 floods behave more like condensing gas drives, whereas Kamath et al. concluded that an increase in the solubility of liquid-phase CO2 in crude oil at temperatures near the critical temperature of CO2 should cause more efficient displacements of oil by CO2. SPEJ P. 480^


2019 ◽  
Vol 58 (31) ◽  
pp. 14595-14602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuai Zhao ◽  
Wanfen Pu ◽  
Mikhail A. Varfolomeev ◽  
Chengdong Yuan ◽  
Alexander A. Rodionov

2021 ◽  
Vol 232 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tingting Teng ◽  
Jidong Liang ◽  
Man Zhang ◽  
Zijun Wu ◽  
Xin Huo

2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 1139-1145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Gui ◽  
Qing Y. Yang ◽  
Hui J. Wu ◽  
Xin Zhang ◽  
Yao Lu

1867 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 132-136

The light oils obtained by the destructive distillation of Cannel-coal at a low temperature, contain, besides the hydrocarbons of the marsh-gas and benzol series, other substances, which are attacked by concentrated sulphuric acid. If the oil, which has been repeatedly shaken with this acid, be subjected to distillation, the hydrocarbons which are unacted upon volatilize first, and a black tarry liquid, equal in bulk to about half the crude oil, remains behind. On heating this residue more strongly, a brown oil, having an unpleasant smell, comes over at about 200°C. ; the temperature rises gradually up to 300°C., and at last a black pitchy mass is left in the retort. Even after repeated rectifications the oil always leaves a solid black residue behind, and it was only by continued fractional distillations over solid caustic potash and metallic sodium, that I succeeded in isolating substances possessing nearly a constant boiling-point and volatilizing almost completely. The compounds which I thus obtained from Cannel-coal oil, boiling below 120°C., are hydrocarbons of the general formula (C n H 2 n -2 ) 2 , as the following analyses and determinations of the vapour-densities show:— (1) C 12 H 20 boiling-point 210°C. ( a ) 0·262 substance gave 0·840 carbonic acid and 0·290 water. ( b ) 0·1978 substance gave 0·635 carbonic acid and 0·2195 water.


1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (12) ◽  
pp. 1910-1918 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Trudinger ◽  
L. A. Chambers ◽  
J. W. Smith

Sulphate is considered to have been a major source of sulphide in strata-bound and stratiform base-metal sulphide deposits. Many of these deposits, however, appear to have been formed at moderate temperatures (<200 °C), which poses the question, By what mechanism(s) was sulphate reduced to sulphide? Two modes of reduction have been established experimentally: (1) catalysis by sulphate-reducing bacteria, which at present is only known to occur below ca. 100 °C; and (2) abiological reduction by ferrous iron or organic matter, which has only been clearly shown above ca. 250 °C.Several attempts have been made to demonstrate abiological reduction below 200 °C, and some new data are presented here. Although the results do not exclude the possibility that such a reaction may be geochemically significant, there has been no unequivocal demonstration of nett sulphide formation from sulphate at these temperatures.Recent studies of the microbiology of hydrothermal regions have opened up the prospect of bacterial sulphate reduction at much higher temperatures than had earlier been thought possible.


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