Abstract

Calcium and sodium naphthenates are solid deposits and emulsions formed by the interaction of naphthenic acids with divalent (Ca2+, Mg2+) or monovalent (Na+, K+) ions in produced waters. Calcium naphthenate formation, an interfacial phenomenon, is thought to depend largely on tetraprotic naphthenic acids known as “ARN” acids (∼C80) in the crude oil, whereas sodium naphthenates originate from lower molecular weight (C15 to C35) monoprotic naphthenic acids. Here we present detailed chemical heteroatom class composition analyses of calcium and sodium naphthenates from the field based on high resolution Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS). In all cases, calcium naphthenate deposits consist predominately of tetraprotic acids with a C80 hydrocarbon skeleton whereas sodium naphthenate emulsions consist mainly of specific monoprotic saturated carboxylic acids. Furthermore, low molecular weight tetraprotic (ARN) acids with C60−77 hydrocarbon skeletons were identified in the calc...

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