Intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process

The objective of this study is to investigate the intermolecular interactions between the surfactants and the fractions of heavy crude oils. Two possible interactions were considered; polar and ionic interactions for two heavy crude oil�surfactant systems, and 20 surfactant-steam flooding tests we...

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Main Authors: Seng, L.Y., Al-Shaikh, M., Hascakir, B.
Format: Article
Published: American Chemical Society 2020
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85096094312&doi=10.1021%2facsomega.0c00193&partnerID=40&md5=09d686086004fe554ba9636d8b9ba6c1
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/29847/
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spelling my.utp.eprints.298472022-03-25T02:57:22Z Intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process Seng, L.Y. Al-Shaikh, M. Hascakir, B. The objective of this study is to investigate the intermolecular interactions between the surfactants and the fractions of heavy crude oils. Two possible interactions were considered; polar and ionic interactions for two heavy crude oil�surfactant systems, and 20 surfactant-steam flooding tests were conducted on these crudes by testing nine surfactants (three anionic, three cationic, and three nonionic) with different tail lengths and charged head groups. The performance differences observed in each core flood were discussed through the additional analyses. To explain polar interactions, the pseudo blends of crude oil fractions (fractionation of saturates, aromatics, resins, and asphaltenes) were exposed to the surfactant solutions under vapor and liquid water conditions and their mutual interactions were visualized under an optical microscope. To explain ionic interactions, the charges on asphaltene surfaces were analyzed by zeta potential measurements before and after core flood tests on both the produced and the residual oil asphaltenes. The addition of surfactants improved the oil recovery when compared to steam injection alone. However, different oil recoveries were obtained with different surfactants. Further analyses showed that asphaltenes are key and the interaction of asphaltenes with other crude oil fractions or surfactants determines the success of surfactant-steam processes. The polar interactions favor the emulsion formation more; hence, if the polar interactions are more dominant than the ion interactions in the overall crude oil�surfactant system, the surfactant flooding process into heavy oil reservoir became more successful. © 2020 American Chemical Society American Chemical Society 2020 Article NonPeerReviewed https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85096094312&doi=10.1021%2facsomega.0c00193&partnerID=40&md5=09d686086004fe554ba9636d8b9ba6c1 Seng, L.Y. and Al-Shaikh, M. and Hascakir, B. (2020) Intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process. ACS Omega, 5 (42). pp. 27383-27392. http://eprints.utp.edu.my/29847/
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
building UTP Resource Centre
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Petronas
content_source UTP Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utp.edu.my/
description The objective of this study is to investigate the intermolecular interactions between the surfactants and the fractions of heavy crude oils. Two possible interactions were considered; polar and ionic interactions for two heavy crude oil�surfactant systems, and 20 surfactant-steam flooding tests were conducted on these crudes by testing nine surfactants (three anionic, three cationic, and three nonionic) with different tail lengths and charged head groups. The performance differences observed in each core flood were discussed through the additional analyses. To explain polar interactions, the pseudo blends of crude oil fractions (fractionation of saturates, aromatics, resins, and asphaltenes) were exposed to the surfactant solutions under vapor and liquid water conditions and their mutual interactions were visualized under an optical microscope. To explain ionic interactions, the charges on asphaltene surfaces were analyzed by zeta potential measurements before and after core flood tests on both the produced and the residual oil asphaltenes. The addition of surfactants improved the oil recovery when compared to steam injection alone. However, different oil recoveries were obtained with different surfactants. Further analyses showed that asphaltenes are key and the interaction of asphaltenes with other crude oil fractions or surfactants determines the success of surfactant-steam processes. The polar interactions favor the emulsion formation more; hence, if the polar interactions are more dominant than the ion interactions in the overall crude oil�surfactant system, the surfactant flooding process into heavy oil reservoir became more successful. © 2020 American Chemical Society
format Article
author Seng, L.Y.
Al-Shaikh, M.
Hascakir, B.
spellingShingle Seng, L.Y.
Al-Shaikh, M.
Hascakir, B.
Intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process
author_facet Seng, L.Y.
Al-Shaikh, M.
Hascakir, B.
author_sort Seng, L.Y.
title Intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process
title_short Intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process
title_full Intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process
title_fullStr Intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process
title_full_unstemmed Intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process
title_sort intermolecular interaction between heavy crude oils and surfactants during surfactant-steam flooding process
publisher American Chemical Society
publishDate 2020
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85096094312&doi=10.1021%2facsomega.0c00193&partnerID=40&md5=09d686086004fe554ba9636d8b9ba6c1
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/29847/
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