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Asphaltene Aggregation Kinetics in Crude Oil Using Confocal Microscopy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2020
Abstract
Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) has been used to study asphaltene aggregation kinetics by employing the microscope's automated acquisition to generate time-lapsed projection maps of aggregating asphaltenes in the autofluorescent matrix of crude oil. Heavy crude oils contain asphaltene particles resulting in the production of optically observable micron-sized asphaltene aggregates. These aggregates form as a result of attractive interactions induced by mixing the heavy crude oil with a poor solvent. This technique has been employed to determine the volume fraction of aggregated asphaltenes, ϕagg, and the time evolution of this phenomenon. The measurements cover a range of various concentrations of asphaltene volume fractions of the heavy asphaltenic oil, ϕm, from ϕm =0.001 to ϕm =0.4.
At each ϕm,after the mixtures have been made, approximately 20 μl of the crude oil is placed in a 20 μm deep flat-well quartz cell and immediately placed on a microscope stage.
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- Microscopy in the Real World: Natural Materials
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- Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 2001