posted on 2019-02-22, 00:00authored byGijo Raj, Edward Larkin, Alain Lesimple, Patrick Commins, Jamie Whelan, Panče Naumov
Simple
surfactants have proven to be some of the most effective
agents to mitigate the deposition of asphaltenes on pipeline walls;
however, the best practices for their application are often empirical,
and the actual mechanisms of their action remain elusive. Here, inhibition
of asphaltene adsorption as viscoelastic films on carbon steel by
a surfactant, dodecylbenzenesulfonic acid (DBSA), was directly monitored
using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation. Different protocols
for application of the inhibitor were assessed, including treatment
of the clean surface before adhesion and application by premixing
and postprecipitation. Asphaltenes were found to form a tightly bound
viscoelastic layer on the carbon steel surface, and administering
DBSA on preadsorbed asphaltenes removes most (86.5%) of this adsorbate.
Premixing of DBSA and asphaltenes to simulate the commonly used application
method results in a very short contact time (∼35 s) before
most of asphaltenes (86.0%) are desorbed from the surface. Pretreatment
of the metal surface with DBSA was found to be particularly effective,
and it results in nearly complete (98.5%) removal. The efficacy of
DBSA in organic scale removal, mainly asphaltenes, over prolonged
time by repeated treatment was also investigated. The results indicate
that alternating application of toluene and DBSA is the most effective
protocol that prevents the loosely bound toluene-soluble fraction
of asphaltenes to act as a nucleation layer that triggers the onset
of growth of the asphaltene layers.