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Novel Alkyl Ether Sulfonates for High Salinity Reservoir: Effect of Concentration on Transient Ultralow Interfacial Tension at the Oil–Water Interface
Author(s) -
Aoudia Mohamed,
AlHarthi Zuleihka,
AlMaamari Rashid S.,
Lee Christie,
Berger Paul
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of surfactants and detergents
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.349
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1558-9293
pISSN - 1097-3958
DOI - 10.1007/s11743-010-1182-y
Subject(s) - pulmonary surfactant , chemistry , surface tension , alkyl , critical micelle concentration , sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate , enhanced oil recovery , micelle , drop (telecommunication) , phase (matter) , chromatography , chemical engineering , microemulsion , thermodynamics , aqueous solution , organic chemistry , telecommunications , biochemistry , physics , computer science , engineering
The effect of surfactant concentration on the occurrence and detection of transient ultralow interfacial tension (IFT) between crude oil and formation water at 75 °C has been investigated using a series of novel sodium alkyl ether sulfonates having various increasing molecular weights and degrees of ethoxylation. All surfactant systems displayed dynamic interfacial tension (DIT). Transient ultralow DIT (DIT min ) were detected only within an intermediate surfactant concentration. This behavior was attributed to an implicit concentration‐related length scale required for the added surfactant to diffuse from the bulk phase to the freshly prepared oil–water interface. In the high surfactant concentration range, this length scale is relatively short and results in an instantaneous (and undetectable) occurrence of DIT mim in a relatively very short time scale, well beyond the detection limit of the spinning drop tensiometer (~2–3 min). Interestingly, DIT min were detected only in systems above the surfactant's critical micelle concentration, suggesting that DIT min occurs as a result of the diffusion (subsequent to the adsorption) of the oil acidic species from the interface to the bulk phase to form mixed micelles with the added surfactant. Measurements of DITs in the presence of decane showed no evidence for DIT min , confirming the general belief that DIT min is indeed due to the interaction of the added surfactant with the oil acidic components. Finally, the effect of surfactant concentration on the equilibrium IFT (γ eq ) showed evidence for relatively low values (~10 −2 mNm −1 ) for some surfactant systems.

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