Pipeline transportation of viscous crudes as concentrated oil-in-water emulsions

Title

Pipeline transportation of viscous crudes as concentrated oil-in-water emulsions

Subject

heavy crude oil
oil-in-water emulsions
pipeline
stability
viscosity

Description

Stable concentrated oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions were prepared and their application for heavy oil pipeline transportation was investigated using very viscous Malaysian heavy crude oil. Two Malaysian heavy crude oil samples, Tapis and a blend of Tapis and Masilla, were used to produce heavy crude oil-in-water emulsions. The diverse factors affecting the properties and stability of emulsions were investigated. There was a restricted limit of 68vol% and 72vol% for crude oil content in the emulsions, and beyond that limit, the emulsion underwent phase inversion. The study revealed that the stability of the oil-in-water emulsion stabilized by Triton X-100 increases as the surfactant concentration increases, with a subsequent decrease in the crude oil–water interfacial tension (IFT). Increasing the oil content, the speed and duration of mixing, the salt concentration and the pH of the aqueous phase of the emulsion resulted in increased emulsion stability, while increases in the temperature of the homogenization process substantially reduced the viscosity of the prepared emulsions. Fresh water and synthetic formation water were used to study the effect of aqueous phase salinity on the stability and viscosity of the emulsion. The results showed that it was possible to form stable emulsions with synthetic formation water characterized by a low dynamic shear viscosity.
90-91

Publisher

Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering

Date

2012-07-01

Contributor

Abdurahman, N.H.
Rosli, Y.M.
Azhari, N.H.
Hayder, B.A.

Type

Journal Article

Identifier

2IQ9PTSB
0920-4105
10.1016/j.petrol.2012.04.025

Collection

Citation

“Pipeline transportation of viscous crudes as concentrated oil-in-water emulsions,” Lamar University Midstream Center Research, accessed May 8, 2024, https://lumc.omeka.net/items/show/345.

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