بررسی تجربی اثر شوری و نوع یون بر پایداری امولسیون‌های آب در نفت

نوع مقاله : مقاله پژوهشی

نویسندگان

1 دانشکده مهندسی شیمی، گروه نفت، دانشگاه تربیت مدرس، تهران، ایران

2 دانشکده مهندسی شیمی و نفت، دانشگاه صنعتی شریف، تهران، ایران

چکیده

از میان روش‌های ازدیاد برداشت نفت، تزریق آب و بخصوص تزریق آب کم‌شور، روش ازدیاد‌برداشت کم‌هزینه‎ای محسوب می‌شود. در سال‌های اخیر مطالعات در این مورد بیشتر به بررسی اثر تزریق آب برروی برهم‌کنش سنگ/ نفت/ آب تخصیص داده شده است. هدف از انجام مطالعه پیش‌رو بررسی برهم‌کنش سیال/ سیال و بدون در نظر گرفتن وجود سنگ است که درمورد آن مطالعات کمی انجام شده است. در آزمایش‌های این پژوهش تعدادی تست بطری طراحی و انجام شده است که در آن 20% نفت خام مرده و 80% آب با شوری‌های مختلف از ppm000/6 تا ppm000/40 در مجاورت هم قرار گرفتند. با نمونه‌گیری از قسمت امولسیونی شده در سطح تماس بین آب و نفت، توزیع اندازه قطرات آب در نفت به‌دست آمد. اندازه قطرات آب از 02/0 تا mm 65/1 (با در نظر گرفتن داده‌هایی که مقادیر آنها خارج از محدوده دیگر داده‌ها بوده است) و فراوانی نسبی دسته‌بندی‌ها حداکثر mm 73/0 بود. نتایج نشان داد که با کاهش شوری اندازه قطرات نیز کاهش یافته و همچنین، از بین نمک‌های مورد آزمایش (سدیم کلرید، کلسیم کلرید، منیزم کلرید و سدیم سولفات)، کلسیم کلرید بیش از سه نمک دیگر توانایی در جذب مواد فعال سطحی طبیعی نفت به‌سمت سطح تماس و افزایش پایداری امولسیون را دارد. در آزمایش‌های مربوطه نشان داده شد که توان افزایش پایداری امولسیون توسط نمک‌ها (جذب مواد فعال سطحی طبیعی نفت مانند آسفالتین و رزین به‌سمت سطح تماس) به‌ترتیب کلسیم کلرید، منیزیم کلرید، سدیم سولفات و سدیم کلرید است. این امر به‌دلیل واکنش یون‌های نمک موجود در آب با نفت و تفاوت در چگالی بار هر یک از یون‌ها و فعالیت سطحی آن‌ها است.

کلیدواژه‌ها


عنوان مقاله [English]

Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Salinity and Type of Ion on the Stability of Water in Oil Emulsion

نویسندگان [English]

  • Ali Reza Roozbahani 1
  • Amir Hossein Saeedi Dehaghani 1
  • Shahab Ayatollahi 2
1 Petroleum Engineering Department, Faculty of Chemical Engineering, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran
2 Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran
چکیده [English]

Water injection especially low-salinity water injection has provided a low-cost EOR method for more oil recovery. In recent years, most of the studies on low-salinity waterflooding have been focused on the investigation of the effect of water injection on rock/oil/water interaction. The purpose of this study is to investigate the fluid/fluid interaction which has received less attention in comparison with the rock/fluids interaction. In this experimental work, a series of bottle tests have been performed with 20 percent of crude oil and 80 percent of saline water (for five different common salts in the seawater) with different salinities from 6,000 to 40,000 ppm. By sampling the emulsified portion at the oil/water interface, the size distribution of the water droplets in oil has been obtained. Moreover, the size of water droplets have varied from 0.02 to 1.65 mm, and relative frequency of categories was 0.73 at its maximum. The size of water droplets decreases with a decease in the salinity. Among the salts, calcium chloride is more effective in comparison with others as the water droplet size is the lowest among three other salts, and consequently it could attract more natural surface active materials from oil to water-oil interface. The sorting of salts from highest to lowest stable emulsion is calcium chloride, magnesium chloride, sodium sulfate and sodium chloride. Ultimately, this is due to the interactions of ions in saline water with oil, charge density of ions and their surface activity.
 

کلیدواژه‌ها [English]

  • Emulsion
  • Low-Salinity Water
  • Stability
  • Oil
  • Types of Ions
  • Salinity
[1]. Dodd C. G., “The rheological properties of films at crude petroleum-water interfaces,” The Journal of Physical Chemistry, Vol. 64, No.5, pp. 544-550, 1960.##
[2]. Kimbler O. K., Reed R. and Silberberg I. “Physical characteristics of natural films formed at crude oil-water interfaces,” Society of Petroleum Engineers Journal, Vol. 6, No. 02, pp. 153-165, 1966.##
[3]. Yeung A., Dabros T., Czarnecki J. and Masliyah J., “On the interfacial properties of micrometre–sized water droplets in crude oil,” in Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. The Royal Society, 1999. ##
[4]. Czarnecki J. and Moran K., “On the stabilization mechanism of water-in-oil emulsions in petroleum systems,” Energy & fuels, Vol. 19, No. 5, pp. 2074-2079, 2005. ##
[5]. Moran K. and Czarnecki J., “Competitive adsorption of sodium naphthenates and naturally occurring species at water-in-crude oil emulsion droplet surfaces,” Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects, Vol. 292, No. 2, pp. 87-98, 2007. ##
[6]. Moradi M., Topchiy E., Lehmann T. E. and Alvarado V., “Impact of ionic strength on partitioning of naphthenic acids in water–crude oil systems–Determination through high-field NMR spectroscopy,” Fuel, Vol. 112, pp. 236-248, 2013. ##
[7]. Lager A., Webb K., Black C., Singleton M. and Sorbie K., “Low salinity oil recovery-an experimental investigation,” Petrophysics, Vol. 49, Issue 01, 2008. ##
[8]. McGuire P., J. Chatham Paskvan F., Sommer D. and Carini F., “Low salinity oil recovery: an exciting new EOR opportunity for Alaska›s North Slope,” in SPE Western Regional Meeting. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 30 March-1 April 2005. ##
[9]. Sheng J., “Critical review of low-salinity waterflooding,” Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering, Vol. 120, pp. 216-224, 2014. ##
[10]. Tang G.-Q. and Morrow N. R., “Influence of brine composition and fines migration on crude oil/brine/rockinteractions and oil recovery,” Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering, Vol. 24, No. 2, pp. 99-111, 1999. ##
[11]. Buckley J. and Morrow N., “Improved oil recovery by low salinity waterflooding: a mechanistic review,” in 11th international symposium on evaluation of wettability and its effect on oil recovery, Calgary. 2010. ##
[12]. Morrow N. and Buckley J., “Improved oil recovery by low-salinity waterflooding,” Journal of Petroleum Technology, Vol. 63, No. 05, pp. 106-112, 2011. ##
[13]. Lager A., Webb K. J., Black C., Singleton M. and Sorbie K. S., “Low salinity oil recovery-an experimental investigation,” Petrophysics, Vol. 49, No. 01, 2008. ##
[14]. Ligthelm D. J., Gronsveld J., Hofman J., Brussee N., Marcelis F. and van der Linde H., “Novel waterflooding strategy by manipulation of injection brine composition,” in EUROPEC/EAGE Conference and Exhibition, Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2009. ##
[15]. Rezaei Doust A., Puntervold T., Strand S. and Austad T., “Smart water as wettability modifier in carbonate and sandstone: A discussion of similarities/differences in the chemical mechanisms,” Energy & fuels, Vol. 23, No. 9, pp. 4479-4485, 2009.
[16]. Hoyer P. and Alvarado V., “Stability of liquid bridges with elastic interface,” RSC Advances, Vol. 7, No. 78, pp. 49344-49352, 2017.
[17]. Wang X. and Alvarado V., “Analysis of capillary pressure and relative permeability hysteresis under low-salinity waterflooding conditions,” Fuel, Vol. 180, pp. 228-243, 2016. ##
[18]. Garcia-Olvera G., Reilly T. M., Lehmann T. E. and Alvarado V., “Effects of asphaltenes and organic acids on crude oil-brine interfacial visco-elasticity and oil recovery in low-salinity waterflooding,” Fuel, Vol. 185, pp. 151-163, 2016. ##
[19]. Ayirala S., Saleh S. and Yousef A., “Microscopic scale study of individual water Ion interactions at complex crude oil-water interface: a new smart water flood recovery mechanism,” in SPE Improved Oil Recovery Conference, Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2016. ##
[20]. Myint P. C. and Firoozabadi A., “Thin liquid films in improved oil recovery from low-salinity brine,” Current Opinion in Colloid & Interface Science, Vol. 20, No. 2, pp. 105-114, 2015. ##
[21]. Stern O., “The theory of the electrolytic double-layer. Z,” Elektrochem, Vol. 30, No. 508, pp. 1014-1020, 1924. ##