eProcess Technologies

Reducing Oil Viscosity – Options for FSM (B-FSM-190)

A multitude of options are available for reducing the continuous phase viscosity – and the effectiveness depends on the specific facilities site utilities available.

Option 1 – Temperature:

  • Most common “additive” – requires fuel/energy source and heat management
  • At least 150°C (300°F) to get to effective FSM treatment region
  • Reduces density, interfacial tension, and coefficient of adhesion as well

Option 2 – Dissolved Liquids:

  • Liquids dissolved into crude oil phase as thinning agent
  • Natural gas condensate (C5+), naphtha, kerosene, etc.
  • Must be recovered-recycled to be cost effective
  • ~10 wt.% gets viscosity in effective FSM treatment region
  • Reduces density, interfacial tension, and coefficient of adhesion as well

Option 3 – Miscible Gas:

  • Not commonly looked at as thinning agent
  • Solution gas, methane, CO2, and flue gas are viable candidates
  • Requires pressure and time to dissolve gas – more effective at normal temperature range

Option 4 – Shear Thinning:

  • Decrease in viscosity due to shear strain
  • High shear zones (i.e., inside pump impellers or vortex field in cyclones) reduce local viscosity – due to break up of particle (e.g., wax, asphaltene, etc.) aggregates
  • Minor, but important, effect

Option 5 – Other:

Chemical Modifiers

  • Polymer (biphasic) viscosity reducers – create water external dispersion (reverse oil and water role) and reduce apparent viscosity; useful for transport but not FSM
  • Ionic liquids – asphaltene (aggregate) modifiers; 10-35% reduction

Pulsed Electric/Magnetic Field

  • Magnetic pulse for paraffin and electric pulse for asphaltene
  • Rearranges paraffin and asphaltene particles temporarily (several hours)
  • 20% reduction in cP with paraffinic crude and 14% reduction with asphaltenic crude (using 1.33 T pulse)

Ultrasonic energy

  • Still being investigated – complex phenomena

References:

  1. Rawlins, C.H. 2019. “Enhanced Production Through Surface Facilities Sand Management.” SPE Distinguished Lecturer presentation. Link here

Next week I will discuss effect of viscosity on FSM unit process design.

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
 
 
white

Copyright © 2024 eProcess Technologies.