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Wetting of Mineral Surfaces by Fatty-Acid-Laden Oil and Brine: Carbonate Effect at Elevated Temperature
Author(s) -
Martin E. J. Haagh,
Nathalie Schilderink,
Frieder Mugele,
Michael H.G. Duits
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
energy and fuels
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1520-5029
pISSN - 0887-0624
DOI - 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.9b01351
Subject(s) - wetting , brine , contact angle , carbonate , calcium carbonate , chemistry , mica , adsorption , chemical engineering , mineral , mineral oil , monolayer , mineralogy , clay minerals , dolomite , materials science , organic chemistry , composite material , biochemistry , engineering
Oil recovery yields from sandstone reservoirs strongly depend on the wetting properties of the rock. Carboxylic acids present in crude oil may decrease the water wettability by adsorbing onto the mineral surface via cation interactions. A highly simplified version of this scenario has been mimicked in the lab to study these mechanisms in more detail. In previous studies on oil/brine/mineral systems the formation of fatty acid monolayers on mica was observed, yielding water contact angles in ambient oil of up to 60°. Here we demonstrate that the presence of 2 mM bicarbonate (typical for brines) has a strong influence at temperatures above 40 °C (as in reservoirs), yielding water contact angles in ambient oil up to 160°. Similar behavior was found for a variety of carboxylic acids. On increasing the (even) carbon number of simple fatty acids from 8 to 20, the contact angle becomes larger until it saturates at 16 carbon atoms. Similar hydrophobic layers are formed by pulling a sheet of mica through an oil/wa...

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