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Journal article

Comparisons Between Asphaltenes from the Dead and Live-Oil Samples of the Same Crude Oils

From

Center for Phase Equilibria and Separation Processes, Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark1

Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark2

Center for Energy Resources Engineering, Centers, Technical University of Denmark3

Asphaltenes precipitated from pressure-preserve bottomhole oil samples have been obtained for three oils at different pressures, using a bulk high-pressure filtration apparatus. The precipitates captured on the filter were recovered, the asphaltenes defined by the n-heptane insolubility were extracted and analyzed.

These pressure-driven asphaltenes found on the filter were found to make up in the range between 50 and 100 ppm of the whole crude oil. Opening of the cell did not reveal asphaltenes retained due to wall adhesion. Size exclusion chromatography tests performed on both the live-oil-derived asphaltenes and the standard asphaltenes as precipitated by atmospheric titration on the same crude oil, revealed that the live-oil asphaltenes had apparent smaller hydrodynamic volume and narrower distributions than the standard asphaltenes for two oils.

Further FTIR tests also showed large differences between standard asphaltenes and the asphaltenes obtained at high pressure filter. The latter appeared to contain more functional groups and be less saturated. Implication of these structural differences on precipitation modeling is discussed.

Language: English
Year: 2003
Pages: 1017-1041
ISSN: 15322459 and 10916466
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1081/LFT-120017463
ORCIDs: Andersen, Simon Ivar

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