Transportation of heavy and extra-heavy crude oil by pipeline: A review
✍ Scribed by Rafael Martínez-Palou; María de Lourdes Mosqueira; Beatriz Zapata-Rendón; Elizabeth Mar-Juárez; César Bernal-Huicochea; Juan de la Cruz Clavel-López; Jorge Aburto
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 555 KB
- Volume
- 75
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0920-4105
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The transportation of heavy and extra-heavy crude oils from the head-well to the refinery is becoming important since their production is currently rising all over the world. Such oils are characterized by a low API gravity (b 20) and high viscosity (N 10 3 cP at 298.15 K) that render difficult oil flow through pipelines. Conventional technology pipelining is designed for light and medium oil crudes, but the pipelining of heavy and extra-heavy crude oils may be challenging because of their high viscosities, asphaltene and paraffin deposition, increasing content of formation water, salt content and corrosion issues. In this paper, the current and innovative technological solutions covering viscosity and friction reduction to move such crude oils from the production site to the processing facilities are thoroughly discussed.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Practically all the conventional chromatographic techniques are used in the characterization of the highly complex mixtures of organic compounds occurring in fuels, heavy fractions, and crude oils. This paper surveys the techniques employed for class determination, preparative fractiona