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Investigating the Fluid–Solid Interaction of Acid Nonionic Nanoemulsion with Carbonate Porous Media

The subject of rock–fluid interaction is important in cases where flow through porous media is occurring. One special case is when the fluid reacts with the porous matrix. In this case, the mass transfer and reaction rate control the dissolution pattern. This article aimed to study the interaction b...

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Autores principales: Lucas, Cláudio Regis dos Santos, Aum, Yanne Katiussy Pereira Gurgel, Araújo, Edson de Andrade, de Castro Dantas, Tereza Neuma, Araújo, Elayne Andrade, Sousa, Talles Nóbrega, Aum, Pedro Tupã Pandava
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7144471/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32214044
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25061475
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author Lucas, Cláudio Regis dos Santos
Aum, Yanne Katiussy Pereira Gurgel
Araújo, Edson de Andrade
de Castro Dantas, Tereza Neuma
Araújo, Elayne Andrade
Sousa, Talles Nóbrega
Aum, Pedro Tupã Pandava
author_facet Lucas, Cláudio Regis dos Santos
Aum, Yanne Katiussy Pereira Gurgel
Araújo, Edson de Andrade
de Castro Dantas, Tereza Neuma
Araújo, Elayne Andrade
Sousa, Talles Nóbrega
Aum, Pedro Tupã Pandava
author_sort Lucas, Cláudio Regis dos Santos
collection PubMed
description The subject of rock–fluid interaction is important in cases where flow through porous media is occurring. One special case is when the fluid reacts with the porous matrix. In this case, the mass transfer and reaction rate control the dissolution pattern. This article aimed to study the interaction between an acid nanoemulsion system and a carbonate porous media. Nanoemulsions were developed to retard the rock’s dissolution and to promote the formation of conductivity channels. Nanoemulsions were prepared using ALK100 (alkyl alcohol ethoxylate) and RNX110 (alkylphenol ethoxylate) (nonionic surfactants), sec-butanol (co-surfactant), xylene isomers (oil phase), and a solution of HCl (aqueous phase). The obtained systems were characterized in terms of surface tension, droplet diameter, and reactivity. X-ray fluorescence/diffraction (XRF/XRD) and X-ray microtomography (microCT) were performed on carbonate porous media samples treated with the acid systems in order to observe the effects of the fluid–rock interaction. The results showed that the acid nanoemulsion, presenting a low oil content formulation, showed the low surface tension and droplet size characteristic of nanoemulsions. It was experimentally verified that the reactivity in the nanoemulsion media was mass-transfer-retarded, and that the wormhole pattern was verified under the studied conditions.
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spelling pubmed-71444712020-04-15 Investigating the Fluid–Solid Interaction of Acid Nonionic Nanoemulsion with Carbonate Porous Media Lucas, Cláudio Regis dos Santos Aum, Yanne Katiussy Pereira Gurgel Araújo, Edson de Andrade de Castro Dantas, Tereza Neuma Araújo, Elayne Andrade Sousa, Talles Nóbrega Aum, Pedro Tupã Pandava Molecules Article The subject of rock–fluid interaction is important in cases where flow through porous media is occurring. One special case is when the fluid reacts with the porous matrix. In this case, the mass transfer and reaction rate control the dissolution pattern. This article aimed to study the interaction between an acid nanoemulsion system and a carbonate porous media. Nanoemulsions were developed to retard the rock’s dissolution and to promote the formation of conductivity channels. Nanoemulsions were prepared using ALK100 (alkyl alcohol ethoxylate) and RNX110 (alkylphenol ethoxylate) (nonionic surfactants), sec-butanol (co-surfactant), xylene isomers (oil phase), and a solution of HCl (aqueous phase). The obtained systems were characterized in terms of surface tension, droplet diameter, and reactivity. X-ray fluorescence/diffraction (XRF/XRD) and X-ray microtomography (microCT) were performed on carbonate porous media samples treated with the acid systems in order to observe the effects of the fluid–rock interaction. The results showed that the acid nanoemulsion, presenting a low oil content formulation, showed the low surface tension and droplet size characteristic of nanoemulsions. It was experimentally verified that the reactivity in the nanoemulsion media was mass-transfer-retarded, and that the wormhole pattern was verified under the studied conditions. MDPI 2020-03-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7144471/ /pubmed/32214044 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25061475 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lucas, Cláudio Regis dos Santos
Aum, Yanne Katiussy Pereira Gurgel
Araújo, Edson de Andrade
de Castro Dantas, Tereza Neuma
Araújo, Elayne Andrade
Sousa, Talles Nóbrega
Aum, Pedro Tupã Pandava
Investigating the Fluid–Solid Interaction of Acid Nonionic Nanoemulsion with Carbonate Porous Media
title Investigating the Fluid–Solid Interaction of Acid Nonionic Nanoemulsion with Carbonate Porous Media
title_full Investigating the Fluid–Solid Interaction of Acid Nonionic Nanoemulsion with Carbonate Porous Media
title_fullStr Investigating the Fluid–Solid Interaction of Acid Nonionic Nanoemulsion with Carbonate Porous Media
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the Fluid–Solid Interaction of Acid Nonionic Nanoemulsion with Carbonate Porous Media
title_short Investigating the Fluid–Solid Interaction of Acid Nonionic Nanoemulsion with Carbonate Porous Media
title_sort investigating the fluid–solid interaction of acid nonionic nanoemulsion with carbonate porous media
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7144471/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32214044
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25061475
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