4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

Frequency dependence of oil conductivity at high pressure

Journal

JOURNAL OF DISPERSION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 419-424

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/01932690601107773

Keywords

asphaltene; oil; pressure; dielectric spectroscopy

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Electric conductivity of materials is defined by a competition of several mechanisms of charge carrier movement: phoretic, ionic and electron-hole jumping. The relative contribution of them is not constant when thermodynamic conditions are changing. Paraffine and naphtene hydrocarbons are typical dielectrics. Formation of supermolecular structures is accompanied by ordering of asphaltene-resin and polyaromatic molecules. Solvate shells contain the molecules with less molecular masses. The disperse particle from the centre to periphery is characterized by reduction of conductivity from the values peculiar to good semiconductors in a nucleus, average in intermediate phase to typical for dielectrics in the disperse media. Threshold of the mobility of charge carriers is determined by temperature, pressure, strength of the external field, width of the forbidden zone, and nature of components of the disperse media and phase. Spectra of conductivity of model asphaltene solutions and Kumkols-kaya oil in frequency range from 10(-3) up to 10(6) Hz are measured for pressures up to 1 GPa in temperature interval from 250 to 320 K. Particularly at the analysis of spectra of conductivity the technique offered by Sheu and Mullins is used. Dependences were approximated by power-law functions according to the concept of Jonscher's the universal response. Influence of pressure and temperature to the exponents is analyzed. Values of activation energy are determined. Received data can be useful for prognosis of oil phase behavior at high pressures.

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