Abstract

Aggregation of asphaltenes remains a scientific challenge. In the present contribution, at first, transverse magnetization relaxation (T2) data from low-field NMR measurements of the asphaltenes from heavy, medium-heavy, or light crude oil samples were recovered. Following this, diffusion ordered spectroscopy nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of these asphaltenes were acquired to obtain average molecular weights (M w) of asphaltene aggregates. Analyzing the relaxation and diffusion behavior of asphaltene aggregates as a function of solution percentage and hence molecular weights are utilized to explain the difference between light, medium-heavy and heavy crude oil asphaltenes in aggregate formation. The main results suggest that light crude oil asphaltenes form a small but significant number of aggregates. In contrast, heavy crude oil asphaltenes demonstrate a more complicated picture at high concentrations with small, medium, and large aggregates. The relaxation behavior of medium-heavy asphaltenes is similar to those of heavy crude oil asphaltenes in diluted solutions and similar to light crude oil asphaltenes in concentrated solutions. Diffusion NMR results showed that the light crude oil asphaltene samples have a relatively smaller aggregate size, higher diffusion coefficient, and hence a smaller molecular weight than the samples extracted from heavy crude oils.

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