Effect of specific functional groups on oil adhesion from mica substrate: Implications for low salinity effect

Low salinity effect has been in the center of attention as a cost-effective and environmentally friendly technique. Wettability alteration of the oil/brine/mica system appears to be the identified mechanism(s) to trigger the low salinity effect. While the effect of water chemistry and minerology on...

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Main Authors: Wu, J., Liu, F., Yang, H., Xu, S., Xie, Sam, Zhang, M., Chen, T., Hu, G., Wang, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56918
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author Wu, J.
Liu, F.
Yang, H.
Xu, S.
Xie, Sam
Zhang, M.
Chen, T.
Hu, G.
Wang, J.
author_facet Wu, J.
Liu, F.
Yang, H.
Xu, S.
Xie, Sam
Zhang, M.
Chen, T.
Hu, G.
Wang, J.
author_sort Wu, J.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Low salinity effect has been in the center of attention as a cost-effective and environmentally friendly technique. Wettability alteration of the oil/brine/mica system appears to be the identified mechanism(s) to trigger the low salinity effect. While the effect of water chemistry and minerology on the wettability of the system has been extensively investigated, few studies have investigated the effect of specific function groups from crude oil on the system wettability, limiting the understanding of how specific functional group contributes to the wettability. We thus experimentally measured the adhesion forces between mica surfaces and functional groups (e.g., C 6 H 5 -, CH 3 -, COOH-, and NH 2 -) in the presence of different aqueous ionic solutions using chemical force microscopy (CFM). Moreover, to understand the contribution of the structural force, the traditional Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory was extended (denoted as EDLVO) to fit the force profiles using a Gauss model. Our results showed that the adhesion force between mica and functional groups in a decreasing order was -NH 2 > -COOH > -CH 3 > -C 6 H 5 . We also found that while DLVO forces strongly affected the tip-surface contact due to the interactions among oil/brine/mica interfaces, the structural forces also played an important role in a distance of 1-20nm due to the presence of H-bonds between COOH-terminated or NH 2 -terminated tip and mica surface. We therefore conclude that the structural force largely contributes to the adhesion force due to the hydrophilicity or polarity of functional groups, and nucleophilic property (such as phenyl group). Our results suggest that the polarity of the crude oil needs to be considered to screen a candidate reservoir for low salinity water flooding projects.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2017
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-569182018-02-05T07:41:46Z Effect of specific functional groups on oil adhesion from mica substrate: Implications for low salinity effect Wu, J. Liu, F. Yang, H. Xu, S. Xie, Sam Zhang, M. Chen, T. Hu, G. Wang, J. Low salinity effect has been in the center of attention as a cost-effective and environmentally friendly technique. Wettability alteration of the oil/brine/mica system appears to be the identified mechanism(s) to trigger the low salinity effect. While the effect of water chemistry and minerology on the wettability of the system has been extensively investigated, few studies have investigated the effect of specific function groups from crude oil on the system wettability, limiting the understanding of how specific functional group contributes to the wettability. We thus experimentally measured the adhesion forces between mica surfaces and functional groups (e.g., C 6 H 5 -, CH 3 -, COOH-, and NH 2 -) in the presence of different aqueous ionic solutions using chemical force microscopy (CFM). Moreover, to understand the contribution of the structural force, the traditional Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory was extended (denoted as EDLVO) to fit the force profiles using a Gauss model. Our results showed that the adhesion force between mica and functional groups in a decreasing order was -NH 2 > -COOH > -CH 3 > -C 6 H 5 . We also found that while DLVO forces strongly affected the tip-surface contact due to the interactions among oil/brine/mica interfaces, the structural forces also played an important role in a distance of 1-20nm due to the presence of H-bonds between COOH-terminated or NH 2 -terminated tip and mica surface. We therefore conclude that the structural force largely contributes to the adhesion force due to the hydrophilicity or polarity of functional groups, and nucleophilic property (such as phenyl group). Our results suggest that the polarity of the crude oil needs to be considered to screen a candidate reservoir for low salinity water flooding projects. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56918 10.1016/j.jiec.2017.07.030 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Wu, J.
Liu, F.
Yang, H.
Xu, S.
Xie, Sam
Zhang, M.
Chen, T.
Hu, G.
Wang, J.
Effect of specific functional groups on oil adhesion from mica substrate: Implications for low salinity effect
title Effect of specific functional groups on oil adhesion from mica substrate: Implications for low salinity effect
title_full Effect of specific functional groups on oil adhesion from mica substrate: Implications for low salinity effect
title_fullStr Effect of specific functional groups on oil adhesion from mica substrate: Implications for low salinity effect
title_full_unstemmed Effect of specific functional groups on oil adhesion from mica substrate: Implications for low salinity effect
title_short Effect of specific functional groups on oil adhesion from mica substrate: Implications for low salinity effect
title_sort effect of specific functional groups on oil adhesion from mica substrate: implications for low salinity effect
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56918