Abstract
AbstractAsphaltene may destabilize during the oil recovery, transportation, and processing and cause significant flow assurance problems that negatively affect the operational expenditures (OPEX). Modeling investigation of asphaltene precipitation and consequently deposition is a vital research component in flow assurance requiring the accurate description of the phenomena under various operational conditions. The structure of asphaltene molecules and the presence of heteroatoms play a significant role in the intermolecular forces and the mechanism of asphaltene aggregation. Nevertheless, the intermolecular forces, e.g., polar forces, and their addition to thermodynamic modeling of asphaltene phase behavior still need investigation. While the traditional equation of state (EoS), e.g., cubic EoS, does not provide any special treatment to polar energy, the π-π interaction and polar effect can be mapped into the EoS using a separate polar term. In this research, we use cubic EoS, cubic plus polar (CPP) EoS, and molecular dynamics (MD) (three different modeling approaches) to analyze the effect of asphaltene structure and operational conditions on the precipitation phenomenon. Comparing the error associated with correlation and prediction results of the models, we show that the CPP approach using optimization to tune parameters of the EoS is the most reliable approach, followed by CPP EoS using MD to find dipole moment for the aryl-linked core asphaltene structure. The CPP EoS and MD optimizing island structure for asphaltene is the third-best model, and SRK EoS is a less efficient approach. Considering the values for dipole moment and molecular weight of asphaltene, along with correlation and prediction ability of the techniques, it is revealed that polar forces can be considered in a separate term in addition to van der Waals force to increase the model efficiency. Moreover, the aryl structure with a 750 g/mol molecular weight and one/two thiophene/pyridine group is the most proper asphaltene structure.
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