Asphaltene analysis takes a giant step

24 Feb 2015

Rice University researchers have developed an easy and accurate technique to detect and quantify the amount of asphaltene precipitated from crude oils, which bedevils the oil industry by clogging wells and flow lines.

 
Asphaltenes (in black) clump together in a model oil created for testing in a Rice University lab. Researchers have created a new method for more accurate detection of asphaltenes that can clog oil production lines. (Credit: Vargas Lab/Rice University)  

Asphaltene is a complex of hydrocarbon molecules found in crude. As the name suggests, it has uses as the source of asphalt for road construction and can also be made into waterproofing and roofing materials, corrosion inhibitors and other products.

But in wells, asphaltene can slow or even halt production as changes in the pressure, temperature and composition of oil as it rises can deposit the material on pipes, pumps and valves. Producers have strategies to prevent or remove deposits, so it's valuable to know where they're likely to form.

The new Rice study led by Francisco Vargas, an assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, puts forth what he calls an indirect method that combines gravimetric (centrifugation) and spectroscopic techniques.

In experiments, the method not only detected and measured asphaltene from very low to very high content in pure crude and model oils, but also detected smaller asphaltene particles than can be sensed with industry-standard direct methods.

The study appears in the American Chemical Society journal Energy and Fuels.

Vargas likened the problem with asphaltene to human arteries clogged by cholesterol deposits. ''Our ultimate objective is to assure the continuous production of oil,'' he said. ''If those wellbores get clogged, regardless of what the problem is, the oil cannot flow.''

Asphaltene deposits were recognised as an issue nearly a century ago, but the problems they present has become more pressing because ''we're running out of easy (to extract) oil,'' he said.

''Up to now, companies would extract the easiest 30 per cent of the oil in an underground reservoir and move on,'' Vargas said. ''Now they have to go back and try to find an economic way to extract that more expensive oil.''

He said enhanced oil recovery techniques that pump carbon dioxide into a well to force oil out can change the composition of the reservoir. ''Asphaltenes that were stable are not any longer,'' he said.

The industry has relied on near-infrared spectroscopy and microscopy methods to detect asphaltene precipitation under high-temperature, high-pressure conditions, but neither can sense particles smaller than 0.5 to 1 microns, so they are somewhat limited in their application, Vargas said.

The Rice lab's indirect method detects the presence of particles as small as 100 nanometers (one-tenth of a micron) with the same near-infrared instrument currently used by industry.

Rather than look at the sum of asphaltene in two types of oil they studied – Middle East crude and model oil created in the lab – the Rice lab used a centrifuge to remove asphaltene particles larger than 100 nanometers. That allowed them to measure the optical density of the remaining liquid to detect the precipitation of asphaltene and quantify the amount precipitated.

By adding various amounts of heptane, which prompts precipitation, and / or toluene, a solvent that dissolves and stabilises asphaltene aggregates, the Rice researchers controlled the suspension of the remaining small particles in their samples.

Under a spectrometer, the absorbance of the model-oil liquid itself is near zero, so any measurement of absorbed light has to be due to the presence of asphaltene particles smaller than 100 nanometers.

Light absorbance differs for crude oil because even after centrifugation, maltene, an asphalt residue, clouds the picture. But Vargas said a simple calibration allows for that and returns accurate results for the asphaltene particles that remain. He noted the indirect method also accounts for the presence of water in oil, while direct methods do not.

Other researchers have found asphaltene particles can be as small as 2.5 to 6 nanometers.

''But these particles, which they call nano-aggregates, are stable and do not cause problems,'' he said. ''We are interested in the larger particles that form deposits.

''As far as we know, this is the only method that can simultaneously detect the onset of precipitation and quantify the amount of asphaltene precipitated,'' Vargas said.

He said future work will apply the indirect method to oil samples under the kinds of pressure found in production lines, as well as potential production impairment caused by asphaltene deposition in reservoirs.

Mohammad Tavakkoli, a postdoctoral research associate at Rice, is lead author of the new study. Co-authors are Rice undergraduate students Marty Grimes, Xiaoyu Liu, Caitlin Garcia, Sarah Correa and Quinton Cox.

The R&D Oil Subcommittee of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company supported the research.