(352b) Development of a Mitigation Strategy for Corrosion-Induced Asphaltene Deposition
AIChE Annual Meeting
2016
2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
Upstream Engineering and Flow Assurance Forum
Flow Assurance and Asset Integrity
Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - 1:00pm to 1:15pm
In a series of experiments, the model oils and actual oils were put in contact with aqueous solutions of iron ions to study the effect of these species on the stability of asphaltenes using the indirect method. Also, a new experimental setup, consisting of a multi-section Teflon column packed with carbon steel spheres was built to quantify the deposition of asphaltenes under different operating conditions. This device was used to study the effect of the aqueous iron solutions on the asphaltene deposition tendency.
It was found that the solubility of iron species is relatively high in the oil phase, compared to other cations, and that unlike other metals iron has a significant destabilizing effect on all the asphaltene systems that were tested. Furthermore, the multiphase systems that were analyzed in the column that is packed with carbon steel spheres, showed increasing asphaltene deposition as the concentration of iron in the aqueous phase increased. Different chelating agents were tried to reduce the detrimental effect of iron and some of these agents were successful. A systematic study was conducted to analyze the effect of different variables on the iron-induced asphaltene precipitation and deposition. pH, ionic strength and emulsified water do not seem to affect the asphaltene precipitation tendency as much as the iron concentration. The effect of roughness caused by the corrosion of the steel spheres is quantified on the increasing tendency of asphaltene deposition.
In this work we account for the corrosion of pipelines and asphaltene deposition and the interrelation between them. According to the evidence that we have found, the corrosion of pipelines might be an aggravating cause for asphaltene deposition in wellbore and surface facilities. By addressing the corrosion problem, asphaltene deposition might actually subside.