Title of article
Investigation on heavy crude-water two phase flow and related flow characteristics
Author/Authors
Wang، نويسنده , , Wei and Gong، نويسنده , , Jing and Angeli، نويسنده , , Panagiota، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
9
From page
1156
To page
1164
Abstract
In this paper, heavy crude oil–water flows are studied in a horizontal stainless steel test section with 25.4 mm ID and overall length of 50 m. Crude oil (viscosity = 628.1 mPa s, interfacial tension with water = 10.33 mN/m at 60 °C) and water, collected from an oilfield, were used as test fluids. Visual observations, local sampling and pressure drop measurements were used to identify the flow patterns and their transitions. It was found that in all conditions studied there was a water-in-oil emulsion present. At low mixture velocities and water fractions this occupied the whole pipe cross section. As the velocity or the volume fraction increased water appeared to segregate. At high water fractions and mixture velocities annular flow appeared with the water-in-oil emulsion in the core surrounded by a water layer. The results were compared with those from a model oil with the same viscosity. At low water fractions there was a similarity between the patterns observed with the two oil systems characterized by water segregation from an oil continuous dispersion with increasing water fraction or mixture velocity. However, at high water fractions an oil-in-water dispersion formed with the model oil that was not seen with the crude oil. Pressure drop was generally higher for the crude oil system compared to the model one, while in both cases it decreased when water started to segregate and form layers in contact with the pipe wall. The differences between the two oil systems are attributed to the natural surfactants present in the heavy crude oil (such as asphaltenes and resins), which tend to accumulate on the water/oil interface, retard film drainage and maintain the stability of water drops in oil.
Keywords
W/o emulsion , Heavy crude-water , Flow patterns , Natural surfactants , Transition characters
Journal title
International Journal of Multiphase Flow
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
International Journal of Multiphase Flow
Record number
1410761
Link To Document