Evaluating the potential of natural surfactants in the petroleum industry: the case of hydrophobins

Author:

Blesic Marijana1,Dichiarante Valentina1,Milani Roberto2,Linder Markus3,Metrangolo Pierangelo124

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Supramolecular and Bio-Nanomaterials (SupraBioNanoLab) , Department of Chemistry, Materials, and Chemical Engineering “Giulio Natta” , Politecnico di Milano , 20131 Milan , Italy

2. VTT-Technical Research Centre of Finland , 02150 Espoo , Finland

3. Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems , Aalto University , P.O. Box 16000 , 02150 Espoo , Finland

4. UNITWIN Network GREENOMIcS, Aalto University , 02150 Espoo , Finland

Abstract

Abstract Enhancing oil recovery from currently available reservoirs is a major issue for petroleum companies. Among the possible strategies towards this, chemical flooding through injection of surfactants into the wells seems to be particularly promising, thanks to their ability to reduce oil/water interfacial tension that promotes oil mobilization. Environmental concerns about the use of synthetic surfactants led to a growing interest in their replacement with surfactants of biological origin, such as lipopeptides and glycolipids produced by several microorganisms. Hydrophobins are small amphiphilic proteins produced by filamentous fungi with high surface activity and good emulsification properties, and may represent a novel sustainable tool for this purpose. We report here a thorough study of their stability and emulsifying performance towards a model hydrocarbon mixture, in conditions that mimic those of real oil reservoirs (high salinity and high temperature). Due to the moderate interfacial tension reduction induced in such conditions, the application of hydrophobins in enhanced oil recovery techniques does not appear feasible at the moment, at least in absence of co-surfactants. On the other hand, the obtained results showed the potential of hydrophobins in promoting the formation of a gel-like emulsion ‘barrier’ at the oil/water interface.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Chemical Engineering,General Chemistry

Reference37 articles.

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2. L. P. Dake. Fundamentals of Reservoir Engineering, Elsevier Science & Technology, Oxford (1983).

3. A. Bera, A. Mandal. J. Petrol. Explor. Prod. Technol.5, 255 (2015).

4. P. M. Mwangi, D. N. Rao. In Surfactant Science and Technology, L. S. Romsted (Ed.), pp. 489–505, CRC Press, Boca Raton (2014).

5. G. G. Ying. Environ. Int.32, 417 (2006).

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