Formulation, optimization and application of triglyceride microemulsion in enhanced oil recovery

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

5-1-2013

Abstract

This paper presents the determination of an aqueous phase composition of a new triglyceride microemulsion in which the triglycerides constitute the whole oil-phase of the microemulsion. Palm oil was used as the oil phase of the microemulsion. Experimental results indicate that the optimum triglyceride microemulsion was achieved when equal mass of palm oil and the aqueous phase containing 3 wt% sodium chloride, 1 wt% alkyl polyglycosides, 3 wt% glyceryl monooleate, and 93 wt% de-ionized water were mixed. The formulated composition of the aqueous phase was able to form translucent Winsor Type I microemulsion with palm oil at ambient conditions. The measured interfacial tension between the optimum microemulsion and the model oil, which is n-octane in this study, was 0.0002 mN/m. The maximum tertiary oil recovery of 71.8% was achieved after the injection of the optimum microemulsion formulation to a sand pack. The significant increase in total oil recovery (87%) suggests the effectiveness of the triglyceride microemulsion formulation for enhanced oil recovery. Its capability in recovering additional oil (4.3% of the trapped oil after water flooding) compared to a typical polymer in tertiary oil recovery indicates the efficiency of the optimum triglyceride microemulsion formulation.

Keywords

Microemulsion, Enhanced oil recovery, Chemical flooding, Palm oil, Triglyceride

Divisions

fac_eng

Publication Title

Industrial Crops and Products

Volume

43

Publisher

Elsevier

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS