Literature DB >> 24564447

Role of asphaltenes in stabilizing thin liquid emulsion films.

Plamen Tchoukov1, Fan Yang, Zhenghe Xu, Tadeusz Dabros, Jan Czarnecki, Johan Sjöblom.   

Abstract

Drainage kinetics, thickness, and stability of water-in-oil thin liquid emulsion films obtained from asphaltenes, heavy oil (bitumen), and deasphalted heavy oil (maltenes) diluted in toluene are studied. The results show that asphaltenes stabilize thin organic liquid films at much lower concentrations than maltenes and bitumen. The drainage of thin organic liquid films containing asphaltenes is significantly slower than the drainage of the films containing maltenes and bitumen. The films stabilized by asphaltenes are much thicker (40-90 nm) than those stabilized by maltenes (∼10 nm). Such significant variation in the film properties points to different stabilization mechanisms of thin organic liquid films. Apparent aging effects, including gradual increase of film thickness, rigidity of oil/water interface, and formation of submicrometer size aggregates, were observed for thin organic liquid films containing asphaltenes. No aging effects were observed for films containing maltenes and bitumen in toluene. The increasing stability and lower drainage dynamics of asphaltene-containing thin liquid films are attributed to specific ability of asphaltenes to self-assemble and form 3D network in the film. The characteristic length of stable films is well beyond the size of single asphaltene molecules, nanoaggregates, or even clusters of nanoaggregates reported in the literature. Buildup of such 3D structure modifies the rheological properties of the liquid film to be non-Newtonian with yield stress (gel like). Formation of such network structure appears to be responsible for the slower drainage of thin asphaltenes in toluene liquid films. The yield stress of liquid film as small as ∼10(-2) Pa is sufficient to stop the drainage before the film reaches the critical thickness at which film rupture occurs.

Entities:  

Year:  2014        PMID: 24564447     DOI: 10.1021/la404825g

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  2 in total

1.  Water versus Asphaltenes; Liquid-Liquid and Solid-Liquid Molecular Interactions Unravel the Mechanisms behind an Improved Oil Recovery Methodology.

Authors:  Edris Joonaki; Jim Buckman; Rod Burgass; Bahman Tohidi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-08-06       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Evaluating physicochemical properties of crude oil as indicators of low-salinity-induced wettability alteration in carbonate minerals.

Authors:  Jin Song; Sara Rezaee; Wenhua Guo; Brianna Hernandez; Maura Puerto; Francisco M Vargas; George J Hirasaki; Sibani L Biswal
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-02-28       Impact factor: 4.379

  2 in total

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