Effect of oil carboxylate hydrophobicity on calcite wettability and its reversal by cationic surfactants: An experimental and molecular dynamics simulation investigation

[Display omitted] •Hydrophobicity of adsorbed carboxylates significantly affects calcite wettability.•The more hydrophobic oil carboxylates result in more oil-wet calcite surfaces.•The wettability reversal efficiency of the cationic surfactants is diminished for more strongly oil-wet calcite surface...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of molecular liquids 2023-06, Vol.380, p.121663, Article 121663
Hauptverfasser: Tetteh, Julius, Kubelka, Jan, Piri, Mohammad
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Hydrophobicity of adsorbed carboxylates significantly affects calcite wettability.•The more hydrophobic oil carboxylates result in more oil-wet calcite surfaces.•The wettability reversal efficiency of the cationic surfactants is diminished for more strongly oil-wet calcite surfaces.•More hydrophobic carboxylates attract the nonpolar oil phase more strongly, reducing the carboxylate-surfactant interaction. The oil-wet state of carbonate reservoirs presents a serious challenge for oil recovery. While cationic surfactants are able to reverse the wettability, their efficiency depends on the oil composition, particularly on the carboxylates as the main surface-active compounds. In this study, calcite surface was aged by two distinct carboxylates: a shorter, less hydrophobic octanoate and a more hydrophobic stearate. The surface wettability and its reversal by a quaternary ammonium cationic surfactant were studied both experimentally by contact angle measurements and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) imaging, and by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Both simulations and experiments show that aging with the more hydrophobic stearates yields more strongly oil-wet surfaces, whose wettability is more difficult to reverse by the cationic surfactant, than aging with octanoates. While the surfactant ultimately reverses the wettability in both cases, significantly higher surfactant concentration is required for the stearate-aged calcite. The difference in the wettability can be rationalized by the greater hydrophobicity of the stearate, which strengthens both the surface adsorption and attraction of the non-polar oil phase.
ISSN:0167-7322
1873-3166
DOI:10.1016/j.molliq.2023.121663