(58b) Asphaltenes Deposition
AIChE Spring Meeting and Global Congress on Process Safety
2012
2012 Spring Meeting & 8th Global Congress on Process Safety
1st International Conference on Upstream Engineering and Flow Assurance
Waxes and Asphaltenes in Flow Assurance
Tuesday, April 3, 2012 - 8:30am to 9:00am
Although asphaltenes are always present in crude oils, they present problems only when they become insoluble in the remainder of the oil. A change in asphaltene solubility can occur because of changes in pressure, composition, or temperature. Whether asphaltene insolubility constitutes a problem, however, depends primarily on when and where in the oil production, transportation, and processing stream it occurs. Instability leading to deposition in a deepwater well is high on the list of potentially problematic situations.
While insolubility is a necessary condition, it is not sufficient to predict the buildup of an asphaltene deposit in a production well. Flocculated asphaltenes may deposit or be carried out of the well in the flowing oil phase. To improve understanding and hence prediction of asphaltene deposition, we have used a capillary deposition test to investigate the tendency of a wide variety of oils to create deposits. Observations, in addition to pressure increases during flow through a capillary, include changes in morphology of asphaltene flocs as they slowly separate from unstable oils, the amount of asphaltene produced as a function of time, and chemical analysis of deposits recovered from capillary tests. As insight grows, the data produced are being used by our collaborators at Rice University and Chevron to develop a simulator to predict the rate of growth of arterial asphaltene deposits under wellbore conditions.