There are numerous problems encountered during extraction, production, transportation and refining of crude oil. Most of these problems are typically oil-specific, meaning that they depend upon the source of the oil, and sometimes they are reservoir-specific, meaning that they depend on the stage of extraction (primary, secondary or enhanced recovery). Nevertheless, a great part of the problems are related to the indigenous surface-active species such as asphaltenes, naphthenates and resins. The definition of asphaltenes rather than being a single molecule is instead based on a solubility class. This means that they are polydisperse in nature which leads to differences in properties and composition. Asphaltenes are responsible for stabilizi...
The adsorption process of asphaltene onto molecularly smooth mica surfaces from toluene solutions of...
The tendency during the past decades in the quality of oil reserves shows that conventional crude oi...
Background and hypothesis: In the oil industry, asphaltenes are known for their tendency to aggregat...
Asphaltenes, as indigenous components in crude oils, are believed to play an important role in the p...
Asphaltenes are heavy constituents of crude oil which affect the flow and viscosity of crude oil. As...
This article is the continuation of a preceding paper (Part I) in which the adsorption and desorptio...
Asphaltene is a significant cause of flow assurance problems in the petroleum industry. Asphaltene p...
Asphaltenes are surface-active molecules which naturally appear in the crude oil. They can adsorb a...
Asphaltene precipitation during natural depletion and enhanced oil recovery (EOR) methods is one of ...
As the complex component in crude oil, asphaltenes adsorb at the interface and exhibit unique interf...
In this work, we present new data on the interfacial and colloidal behavior of asphaltenes in model ...
Asphaltenes are “<i>n</i>-alkane insoluble” species in crude oil that stabilize water-in-oil emulsio...
The formation of highly stable water-in-oil emulsions results in complications in both upstream and ...
Asphaltenes are the heavy fraction of crude oil, defined operationally as being soluble in aromatic ...
Asphalthenes are typically defined as the fraction of petroleum insoluble in n-alkanes (typically he...
The adsorption process of asphaltene onto molecularly smooth mica surfaces from toluene solutions of...
The tendency during the past decades in the quality of oil reserves shows that conventional crude oi...
Background and hypothesis: In the oil industry, asphaltenes are known for their tendency to aggregat...
Asphaltenes, as indigenous components in crude oils, are believed to play an important role in the p...
Asphaltenes are heavy constituents of crude oil which affect the flow and viscosity of crude oil. As...
This article is the continuation of a preceding paper (Part I) in which the adsorption and desorptio...
Asphaltene is a significant cause of flow assurance problems in the petroleum industry. Asphaltene p...
Asphaltenes are surface-active molecules which naturally appear in the crude oil. They can adsorb a...
Asphaltene precipitation during natural depletion and enhanced oil recovery (EOR) methods is one of ...
As the complex component in crude oil, asphaltenes adsorb at the interface and exhibit unique interf...
In this work, we present new data on the interfacial and colloidal behavior of asphaltenes in model ...
Asphaltenes are “<i>n</i>-alkane insoluble” species in crude oil that stabilize water-in-oil emulsio...
The formation of highly stable water-in-oil emulsions results in complications in both upstream and ...
Asphaltenes are the heavy fraction of crude oil, defined operationally as being soluble in aromatic ...
Asphalthenes are typically defined as the fraction of petroleum insoluble in n-alkanes (typically he...
The adsorption process of asphaltene onto molecularly smooth mica surfaces from toluene solutions of...
The tendency during the past decades in the quality of oil reserves shows that conventional crude oi...
Background and hypothesis: In the oil industry, asphaltenes are known for their tendency to aggregat...