The present invention relates to a method for isolation and quantification of naphthenate forming acid in crude oil.
Crude oils may contain different quantities of naphthenic acids. Statoil and ConocoPhillips have previously published the discovery that among these acids the naphthenate forming acids also known as the ARN acid family, are a universal prerequisite for- and main ingredient of calcium naphthenate deposits see Baugh, T. D.; Grande, K. V.; Mediaas, H.; Vindstad, J. E.; Wolf, N. O., “Characterization of a Calcium Naphthenate Deposit—The ARN Acid Discovery.” American Chemical Society, Petroleum Chemistry Division Preprints 2004, 47, (1) and Baugh, T. D.; Grande, K. V.; Mediaas, H.; Vindstad, J. E.; Wolf, N. O. “The Discovery of High Molecular Weight Naphthenic Acids (ARN Acid) Responsible for Calcium Naphthenate Deposits”, SPE 7th International Symposium on Oilfield Scale, 11-12 May, Aberdeen, United Kingdom, Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2005.
Accordingly, to be able to obtain a reliable estimate of the amount of calcium naphthenate deposits one may expect from a crude oil and design appropriate naphthenate management strategies, it is important to know not the amount of naphthenic acids but the amount of ARN-acids present in the crude oil.
ARN-acids are present in crude oils of different origin in different amounts.
Naphthenate deposition has been subject for a number of publications over the last years.
EP1840567 discloses a crude oil screening process which includes a quantification of naphthenic acids, the process does not involve a separation of ARN-acids from the other naphthenic acids with high molecular weight. It is further disclosed that the results may be used in an indirect method for estimating the naphthenate deposition potential for crude oils.
Simon S. et. Al., “Determination of C80 tetra-acid content in calcium naphthenate deposits”, Journal of Chromatography A, June 2008, Vol. 1200, No. 2 pages 136-143, disclose a method of analysing naphthenate deposits based on that ARN-acids are the dominating acid in these deposits. In crude oils ARN-acids only constitute a very small part of the total content of acids, normally less than 100 ppm.
Benjamin Brocart, Maurice Bourrel, Christian Hurtevent, Jean-Luc Volle, Bernard Escoffier (2007) “ARN-Type Naphthenic Acids in Crudes: Analytical Detection and Physical Properties”, Journal of Dispersion Science and Technology 28(3): 331-337, disclose a method for the detection of the presens of ARN acids in crude oils. The disclosed method is based on replication of the natural prosess for formation of naphthenate. However none of the disclosed methods are described as being selective and quantative results are not obtained.
Until now no technology exists to quantify the amount of the naphthenate-forming ARN acids in crude oils. However due to there important role in formation of deposits there is a need for such knowledge for developing efficient naphthenate management strategies for oil fields in planning and operational phases.
The aim of the present invention is to provide such a method for the quantification of ARN acids. A further aim is to provide a method with high selectivity towards ARN-acids.
The present invention provides a method to determine the concentration of ARN acids in crude oils. The method for isolation and quantification of ARN acids in an crude oil sample is characterized by the following steps:
In one embodiment the method further comprises diluting the crude oil sample before it is brought in contact with the solid selective ARN absorption medium. The organic solvent utilized in the method is in one embodiment toluene or xylene, at least a part of the organic solvent may be removed before step g) or optionally step f) is performed. Further step d) may be repeated one or more times before step e) is performed.
In one aspect of the invention the solid ARN absorption/adsorption medium is selected from the group consisting of hyroxides of alkaline earth metals, alkali metals, and transition metals. In another aspect the solid ARN absorption/adsorption medium is oxides of alkaline earth metals, alkali metals, and transition metals. In yet another aspect the solid ARN absorption/adsorption medium is selected from the group consisting of carbonates or bicarbonates of alkaline earth metals, alkali metals and transition metals, other basic transition metal salts, silica, modified silica, or sephadex. In one embodiment the solid ARN absorption medium is Ca(OH)2.
In yet another aspect of the method according to the present invention the solids are dissolved in step d).
Other embodiments and further features of the present invention are disclosed in the enclosed dependant claims.
The method for quantification of ARN-acids according to the present invention involves selective absorption of ARN acids by a solid medium. Isolation of the solid medium and transferring the ARN acids into an organic solvent which can by analysed for its ARN acid content. According to the present invention the ARN-acids are isolated from all other acids present in crude oil. The method according to the present invention transfers mainly all ARN-acids to the solid medium and the ARN-acids are released from the solid medium in step d).
In a preferred embodiment the solid medium is Ca(OH)2. In this case, enough aqueous acid is added during the transfer of ARN acids to an organic solvent step to dissolve the solid medium. When the absorption medium is dissolved in the presence of a hydrofobic ARN solvent, all ARN acids are dissolved and transferred to the hybrofobic solvent and all the calcium ions and the reacted acid remain in the aqueous phase.
This invention is the first technology of its kind which can quantify the amount of ARN acids in crude oil sample.
The present invention will be described in more detail with reference to the enclosed figures where:
a shows the negative ion mass spectra of crude oil including ARN acids;
b shows the spectra after the ARN acids have been isolated into a separate organic solvent using the present method;
In a preferred embodiment the process according to the present invention includes the steps:
In one embodiment the solid medium is selected among, alkaline earth hydroxides (e.g., Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2 or Ba(OH)2), alkaline earth oxides (e.g., CaO, SrO), alkaline earth carboxides (e.g., CaCO3), bicarbonates of alkali metals such as NaHCO3, basic transition metal salts (e.g. Fe(OH)2, Fe(OH)3, or FeCO3), other transition metal salts such as metal halides (e.g. FeCl3) or sepadex. In another embodiment the solid medium is Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, CaO or SrO. In yet another embodiment the solid medium is Ca(OH)2.
Ca(OH)2+2H+→Ca2++2H2O
or equivalent for other basic salts. This step must be repeated until all the ARN acids are transferred to the organic solvent phase. Applicable acids are inorganic acids (HCl, H2SO4 or other), water-soluble organic acids such as formic- and acetic acid, or other acidic substances.
The amount of ARN in the organic solvent is quantified, e.g., using one of the techniques mentioned under step 8 or by means of other analytical techniques—direct or indirect. The ARN concentration in the original crude oil is calculated from the result from step 8, considering all dilution and concentration steps undertaken as part of the procedure.
a and 1b show mass spectra of naphthenic acids extracted from a crude oil spiked with 5 ppm ARN acids.
The selectivity of the solid absorption medium is important for the quantification of ARN-acids.
The applicability of different types of solid media in the method disclosed here have been tested, the evaluation of the these tests are illustrated in
Tests of different solid media (absorbents/adsorbents) where performed by allowing a solution comprising ARN acids (200 mg/kg solvent) and lighter carboxylic acids (1 g/kg solvent) to pass through a test tube filled up to a certain height with the solid medium to be tested, and analyzing the mass spectrum of the solution that has past the solid medium. Some of the obtained test results are shown on
The following examples show result obtained when quantifying ARN-acids in a sample utilizing the method according to the present invention.
Isolation efficiency/ARN acid recovery from spiked crude oil and toluene solutions by application of the present method using Ca(OH)2 as absorbent. APPI-MS was the detection method used to quantify ARN, cf. point 8 above. The amount of Ca(OH)2 used in example no. 1, 3 and 5 was 1 gram, in example no. 2 and 4 was 2 grams. In example no. 1, 3 and 5 the Ca(OH)2 was added to the medium and diluent mixture and shaken over night before the separation of the solids. In example 2 and 4 the mixture of medium and diluent was past through the Ca(OH)2 placed within a column.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20092378 | Jun 2009 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO2010/000238 | 6/22/2010 | WO | 00 | 4/12/2012 |