Theoretical and experimental study of foam stability mechanism by nanoparticles: Interfacial, bulk and, porous media behavior

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Theoretical and experimental study of foam stability mechanism by nanoparticles: Interfacial, bulk and, porous media behavior. / Suleymani, Muhammad; Ghotbi, Cyrus; Ashouri, Siavash et al.
in: Journal of molecular liquids, Jahrgang 304.2020, Nr. 15 April, 112739, 19.02.2020.

Publikationen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschung(peer-reviewed)

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Suleymani M, Ghotbi C, Ashouri S, Moghadisi J, Kharrat R. Theoretical and experimental study of foam stability mechanism by nanoparticles: Interfacial, bulk and, porous media behavior. Journal of molecular liquids. 2020 Feb 19;304.2020(15 April):112739. Epub 2020 Feb 19. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molliq.2020.112739

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Suleymani, Muhammad ; Ghotbi, Cyrus ; Ashouri, Siavash et al. / Theoretical and experimental study of foam stability mechanism by nanoparticles: Interfacial, bulk and, porous media behavior. in: Journal of molecular liquids. 2020 ; Jahrgang 304.2020, Nr. 15 April.

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@article{844a219035c749018b1391a427f30b7a,
title = "Theoretical and experimental study of foam stability mechanism by nanoparticles: Interfacial, bulk and, porous media behavior",
abstract = "Foam flooding has been applied as a promising method in enhanced oil recovery to obviate the challenges of gas flooding such as fingering, channeling and overriding. However, long-term foam stability is crucial for mobility control. In this work, the effective mechanisms on foam stability in the presence of CaCO3 nanoparticles were assessed both theoretically and experimentally. The static and dynamic behaviors of cationic surfactant (HTAB) foam in the presence of CaCO3 nanoparticles with different hydrophobicity were evaluated. The CaCO3 nanoparticles were treated with a series of long-chain fatty acids to generate a range of wettability. Afterward, the underlying mechanisms were revealed by conducting the supplementary experiments, including measurements of effective diffusion coefficient (Deff), Henry's constant (KH), interfacial tension (IFT), and zeta potential of nanoparticles. Further, efforts were made to analyze the interfacial interactions using xDLVO theory. By increasing of nanoparticles hydrophobicity, the continuous reduction of effective diffusion coefficient, solubility, and IFT was observed, which means higher foam stability. However, the adsorption of modified nanoparticles on the air-solution interface could reduce the total disjoining pressure between two parallel plates, supported by xDLVO prediction. This phenomenon has an adverse effect on the thin film stability. Therefore, there would be an optimum extent of nanoparticles surface modification to obtain the most stable foam stability, which was in agreement with the both bulk and porous media observations. The optimum condition was shifted to the nanoparticles modified with the lower chain fatty acids by increasing the concentration of fatty acid solutions. In this case, the negative effect of reduced disjoining pressure was more pronounced.",
keywords = "Foam stability, XDLVO theory, Wettability alteration, Mobility control, Foam flooding",
author = "Muhammad Suleymani and Cyrus Ghotbi and Siavash Ashouri and Jamshid Moghadisi and Riyaz Kharrat",
year = "2020",
month = feb,
day = "19",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molliq.2020.112739",
language = "English",
volume = "304.2020",
journal = "Journal of molecular liquids",
issn = "873-3166",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "15 April",

}

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Theoretical and experimental study of foam stability mechanism by nanoparticles: Interfacial, bulk and, porous media behavior

AU - Suleymani, Muhammad

AU - Ghotbi, Cyrus

AU - Ashouri, Siavash

AU - Moghadisi, Jamshid

AU - Kharrat, Riyaz

PY - 2020/2/19

Y1 - 2020/2/19

N2 - Foam flooding has been applied as a promising method in enhanced oil recovery to obviate the challenges of gas flooding such as fingering, channeling and overriding. However, long-term foam stability is crucial for mobility control. In this work, the effective mechanisms on foam stability in the presence of CaCO3 nanoparticles were assessed both theoretically and experimentally. The static and dynamic behaviors of cationic surfactant (HTAB) foam in the presence of CaCO3 nanoparticles with different hydrophobicity were evaluated. The CaCO3 nanoparticles were treated with a series of long-chain fatty acids to generate a range of wettability. Afterward, the underlying mechanisms were revealed by conducting the supplementary experiments, including measurements of effective diffusion coefficient (Deff), Henry's constant (KH), interfacial tension (IFT), and zeta potential of nanoparticles. Further, efforts were made to analyze the interfacial interactions using xDLVO theory. By increasing of nanoparticles hydrophobicity, the continuous reduction of effective diffusion coefficient, solubility, and IFT was observed, which means higher foam stability. However, the adsorption of modified nanoparticles on the air-solution interface could reduce the total disjoining pressure between two parallel plates, supported by xDLVO prediction. This phenomenon has an adverse effect on the thin film stability. Therefore, there would be an optimum extent of nanoparticles surface modification to obtain the most stable foam stability, which was in agreement with the both bulk and porous media observations. The optimum condition was shifted to the nanoparticles modified with the lower chain fatty acids by increasing the concentration of fatty acid solutions. In this case, the negative effect of reduced disjoining pressure was more pronounced.

AB - Foam flooding has been applied as a promising method in enhanced oil recovery to obviate the challenges of gas flooding such as fingering, channeling and overriding. However, long-term foam stability is crucial for mobility control. In this work, the effective mechanisms on foam stability in the presence of CaCO3 nanoparticles were assessed both theoretically and experimentally. The static and dynamic behaviors of cationic surfactant (HTAB) foam in the presence of CaCO3 nanoparticles with different hydrophobicity were evaluated. The CaCO3 nanoparticles were treated with a series of long-chain fatty acids to generate a range of wettability. Afterward, the underlying mechanisms were revealed by conducting the supplementary experiments, including measurements of effective diffusion coefficient (Deff), Henry's constant (KH), interfacial tension (IFT), and zeta potential of nanoparticles. Further, efforts were made to analyze the interfacial interactions using xDLVO theory. By increasing of nanoparticles hydrophobicity, the continuous reduction of effective diffusion coefficient, solubility, and IFT was observed, which means higher foam stability. However, the adsorption of modified nanoparticles on the air-solution interface could reduce the total disjoining pressure between two parallel plates, supported by xDLVO prediction. This phenomenon has an adverse effect on the thin film stability. Therefore, there would be an optimum extent of nanoparticles surface modification to obtain the most stable foam stability, which was in agreement with the both bulk and porous media observations. The optimum condition was shifted to the nanoparticles modified with the lower chain fatty acids by increasing the concentration of fatty acid solutions. In this case, the negative effect of reduced disjoining pressure was more pronounced.

KW - Foam stability

KW - XDLVO theory

KW - Wettability alteration

KW - Mobility control

KW - Foam flooding

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85080035201&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molliq.2020.112739

DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molliq.2020.112739

M3 - Article

VL - 304.2020

JO - Journal of molecular liquids

JF - Journal of molecular liquids

SN - 873-3166

IS - 15 April

M1 - 112739

ER -