Relationships between SARA fractions of conventional oil, heavy oil, natural bitumen and residues

[Display omitted] •SARA data of 230 samples of conventional, heavy oil, natural bitumen and residues are analyzed.•Data are distributed along parallel lines with slopes of 1 on the cross-plots.•R increases at increasing A for conventional oil and decreases for most of bitumen and residues.•S decreas...

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Veröffentlicht in:Fuel (Guildford) 2018-03, Vol.216, p.330-340
1. Verfasser: Rudyk, Svetlana
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •SARA data of 230 samples of conventional, heavy oil, natural bitumen and residues are analyzed.•Data are distributed along parallel lines with slopes of 1 on the cross-plots.•R increases at increasing A for conventional oil and decreases for most of bitumen and residues.•S decreases at increasing A for conventional oil and increases for heavy oil and bitumen.•Data of natural bitumen split into (As + S) and (R + A) suitable for calculation of Ic index.•Suitability of Ic or Ia for heavy oil and residues depend on their origin. A number of indices generated from SARA analyses data are used for characterization of petroleum mixtures (e.g. colloidal instability index Ic = (As + S)/(R + A) and asphaltene index Ia = (As + R)/(S + A)). Knowledge of relationships between SARA fractions is necessary for selection of indices, understanding of chemical continuum from light to heavy compositions and prediction of properties such as density, viscosity, boiling temperature, asphaltene stability, and others. SARA analyses data of 230 samples of conventional oil, heavy oil, oil sand, natural asphalt, residues obtained through refinery processes, and bitumen blends from 50 publications are compared. For the exception of conventional oil and bitumen blends, data of SARA fractions taken in pairs follow similar lines with the slopes of k = ±1 when plotted as Y vs. X for heavy oil, natural bitumen and residues. The slope of 1 indicates that sums or differences of two fractions (±Y ± X) are constants regardless of a wide range of variation of Y and X. This allows graphic solution of indices and evaluation whether they are applicable for specific types of petroleum mixtures. The close values of (R + A) and (As + S) are more often generated for natural bitumen data, relevant to calculation of Ic. For heavy oil and residues, combinations of either (R + A) and (As + S), or (S + A) and (As + R) depend on origin. Ia has no graphic solution for conventional oil.
ISSN:0016-2361
1873-7153
DOI:10.1016/j.fuel.2017.12.001