Abstract

In this paper we present a molecular thermodynamics approach for the modeling of adsorption isotherms of asphaltenes adsorbed on Berea sandstone, Bedford limestone and dolomite rock, using a model for bulk asphaltenes precipitation and a quasi-two-dimensional approach for confined fluids [E. Buenrostro-González, C. Lira-Galeana, A. Gil-Villegas, J. Wu, AIChE J., 50 (2004) 2552–2570; A. Martínez, M. Castro, C. McCabe A. Gil-Villegas, J. Chem. Phys. 126 (2007) 074707, respectively], both based on the Statistical Associating Fluid Theory for Potentials of Variable Range [A. Gil-Villegas, A. Galindo, P.J. Whitehead, S.J. Mills, G. Jackson, A.N. Burgess, J. Chem. Phys. 106 (1997) 4168–4186]. The theory is applied to model adsorption isotherms from experimental data of asphaltenes extracted from a dead sample of heavy crude oil from a Mexican reservoir. The theoretical results give the right Langmuir Type II adsorption isotherms observed experimentally. The model requires the determination of ten molecular parameters related to the size of the particles and the square-well potentials used to describe the particle–surface and particle–particle interactions at the bulk and adsorbed phases. Nine parameters are taken from previous published results about the behavior of asphaltenes in bulk phases and the adsorption of several molecular fluids onto activated carbon and graphite surfaces. The remaining parameter, the energy strength of the particle–surface interaction, is adjusted to reproduce the experimental data, obtaining values that are consistent with Molecular Mechanics calculations for asphaltenes adsorbed on different surfaces and solutions. Although the agreement between theory and experiments shows some deviations at low bulk concentrations, the model reproduces adsorption data at high concentrations where other semi-empirical approaches fail.

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