posted on 2017-01-12, 00:00authored byChen Shi, Ling Zhang, Lei Xie, Xi Lu, Qingxia Liu, Jiajun He, Cesar A. Mantilla, Frans G. A. Van den berg, Hongbo Zeng
Adsorption
of interfacially active components at the water/oil
interface plays critical roles in determining the properties and behaviors
of emulsion droplets. In this study, the droplet probe atomic force
microscopy (AFM) technique was applied, for the first time, to quantitatively study the interaction mechanism between
water-in-oil (W/O) emulsion droplets with interfacially adsorbed asphaltenes.
The behaviors and stability of W/O emulsion droplets were demonstrated
to be significantly influenced by the asphaltene concentration of
organic solution where the emulsions were aged, aging time, force
load, contact time, and solvent type. Bare water droplets could readily
coalesce with each other in oil (i.e., toluene), while interfacially
adsorbed asphaltenes could sterically inhibit droplet coalescence
and induce interfacial adhesion during separation of the water droplets.
For low asphaltene concentration cases, the adhesion increased with
increasing asphaltene concentration (≤100 mg/L), but it significantly
decreased at relatively high asphaltene concentration (e.g., 500 mg/L).
Experiments in Heptol (i.e., mixture of toluene and heptane) showed
that the addition of a poor solvent for asphaltenes (e.g., heptane)
could enhance the interfacial adhesion between emulsion droplets at
relatively low asphaltene concentration but could weaken the adhesion
at relatively high asphaltene concentration. This work has quantified
the interactions between W/O emulsion droplets with interfacially
adsorbed asphaltenes, and the results provide useful implications
into the stabilization mechanisms of W/O emulsions in oil production.
The methodology in this work can be readily extended to other W/O
emulsion systems with interfacially active components.