2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(252f) A Rapid Microwave-Assisted Bottle Test Method to Determine the Crude Emulsion Stability
The tight crude oil emulsions, characterized by suspended droplets on the order of submicron to tens of microns, often cause serious problems to the wellbores and pipelines such as clogging, corrosion, and pump failures. Our previously developed microwave demulsification process proved to be orders of magnitude faster at separating heavy crudes and tight emulsions when compared to heat and gravity settling alone, as used by the traditional Bottle Test.
To simulate field conditions, we mixed two crude oils to prepare samples with American Petroleum Institute (API) gravities between 28.9° and 46.0°. These crudes were mixed with water to create emulsions containing between 20% and 80% water. This array of Water-in-Oil (W/O) and Oil-in-Water (O/W) emulsions with different densities and viscosities were mixed at varying shear rates. A Polyol Block copolymer, and Polyethylene Glycol 2000 (Mol. Wt. 2000) were used as demulsifying agents at different concentrations. The crude oil emulsions mixed with the demulsifying agents were subjected to both the traditional Bottle Test as well as the rapid microwave test. The amount of phase separation was visually recorded and the residual water content in the separated oil phase was measured using the Karl Fisher titration. Using the separation data for both methods, we developed a correlation between the two methods. The results from the rapid microwave test can now be used to determine how they correlate with the standard bottle test.