posted on 2017-10-18, 19:33authored byYu-Jiun Lin, Peng He, Mohammad Tavakkoli, Nevin Thunduvila Mathew, Yap Yit Fatt, John C. Chai, Afshin Goharzadeh, Francisco M. Vargas, Sibani Lisa Biswal
Asphaltenes are components in crude
oil known to deposit and interrupt
flows in critical regions during oil production, such as the wellbore
and transportation pipelines. Chemical dispersants are commonly used
to disperse asphaltenes into smaller agglomerates or increase asphaltene
stability in solution with the goal of preventing deposition. However,
in many cases, these chemical dispersants fail in the field or even
worsen the deposition problems in the wellbores. Further understanding
of the mechanisms by which dispersants alter asphaltene deposition
under dynamic flowing conditions is needed to better understand flow
assurance problems. Here, we describe the use of porous media microfluidic
devices to evaluate how chemical dispersants change asphaltene deposition.
Four commercially used alkylphenol model chemical dispersants are
tested with model oils flowing through porous media, and the resulting
deposition kinetics are visualized at both the matrix scale and pore
scale. Interestingly, initial asphaltene deposition worsens in the
presence of the tested dispersants, but the mechanism by which plugging
and permeability reduction in the porous media varies. The velocity
profiles near the deposit are analyzed to further investigate how
shear forces affect asphaltene deposition. The deposition tendency
is also related to the intermolecular interactions governing the asphaltene–dispersant
systems. Furthermore, the model system is extended to a real case.
The use of porous media microfluidic devices offers a unique platform
to develop and design effective chemical dispersants for flow assurance
problems.