Abstract

The aquathermolysis process is widely considered to be one of the most promising approaches of in-situ upgrading of heavy oil. It is well known that introduction of metal ions speeds up the aquathermolysis reactions. There are several types of catalysts such as dispersed (heterogeneous), water-soluble and oil soluble catalysts, among which oil-soluble catalysts are attracting considerable interest in terms of efficiency and industrial scale implementation. However, the rock minerals of reservoir rocks behave like catalysts; their influence is small in contrast to the introduced metal ions. It is believed that catalytic aquathermolysis process initiates with the destruction of C-S bonds, which are very heat-sensitive and behave like a trigger for the following reactions such as ring opening, hydrogenation, reforming, water–gas shift and desulfurization reactions. Hence, the asphaltenes are hydrocracked and the viscosity of heavy oil is reduced significantly. Application of different hydrogen donors in combination with catalysts (catalytic complexes) provides a synergetic effect on viscosity reduction. The use of catalytic complexes in pilot and field tests showed the heavy oil viscosity reduction, increase in the content of light hydrocarbons and decrease in heavy fractions, as well as sulfur content. Hence, the catalytic aquathermolysis process as a distinct process can be applied as a successful method to enhance oil recovery. The objective of this study is to review all previously published lab scale and pilot experimental data, various reaction schemes and field observations on the in-situ catalytic aquathermolysis process.

Highlights

  • Heavy oil stands for one-third of global hydrocarbon resources

  • We thoroughly discussed the application of the catalytic aquathermolysis process for in-situ upgrading of heavy oil

  • We have highlighted the importance of various aquathermolysis catalysts, which improve the efficiency of heavy oil recovery

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Summary

Introduction

Heavy oil stands for one-third of global hydrocarbon resources. Only in Russia, the reserves of heavy oil are estimated at 6–7 billion tons [1]. Substantial advances in catalysis have made the catalytic aquathermolysis a distinct process, and catalytic steam-based heavy oil recovery techniques has been investigated as a promising technology to recover heavy oil resources [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]. This process occurs in the cheapest high-pressure reactor of all, petroleum formations [3,4,5,6]. This paper sheds new light on the process of upstream heavy oil aquathermolysis in the presence of transition metal-based catalysts

Catalytic Aquathermolysis
Use of Hydrogen Donors
Use of Aquathermolysis Catalysts
Nanocatalysts
Water-Soluble Catalysts
Oil-Soluble Catalysts
Rock Minerals
Field Tests of Catalytic Aquathermolysis
Findings
Concluding Remarks
Full Text
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