2013 AIChE Annual Meeting

(639b) Supercritical Water Process to Upgrade Heavy Oil

Authors

Abdullah Abdulhadi, Saudi Aramco
Ali Jishi, Saudi Aramco
Ashok K. Punetha, Saudi Aramco
Emad Shafei, Saudi Aramco
Joo-Hyeong Lee, Saudi Aramco
Mohammad Garhoush, Saudi Aramco
Ali H. Alshareef, Saudi Aramco
Faisal Al-Mulla, Saudi Aramco
Mohammed Albahar, Saudi Aramco
Bader Al-Otaibi, Saudi Aramco
Muneef Qarzouh, Saudi Aramco
Mohammad Al-Dossary, Saudi Aramco



Supercritical water, as an environmentally friendly solvent, found potentially a new application area: heavy oil upgrading. Although water is a very common species in exploration and production of petroleum, direct usage in upgrading of heavy oil has not been applied industrially. Basic chemistry governing upgrading reaction under supercritical water is believed to resemble that of conventional thermal cracking such as visbreaking and coking. However, presence of supercritical water has capability to organize random radical reactions to suppress coking and gas generation. Major huddles to the scale-up of such a novel process are high energy cost required to heat-up large quantities of water, heavy-duty equipment to handle harsh operation conditions, and plugging of process lines by coke or sludge. These technical challenges can be resolved based on the fundamental understanding of the process reactions and fluids. This paper will present the recent advances in supercritical water technology for heavy oil upgrading as well as the proper approach to facilitate its industrial application.