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Toward the Mechanism of Corrosion in Crude Oil: A Study Using Vibrational Spectroscopic Techniques at Elevated Temperatures
Naphthenic
acid, a significant cause of corrosion of carbon-steel
in crude oil, has been investigated at elevated temperatures using
vibrational spectroscopic methods (Raman and Fourier transform infrared
(FT-IR)). Unlike earlier reports of studies at ambient temperatures,
these elevated temperature experiments performed on a series of carboxylic
acids having structures similar to naphthenic acid components in crude
oil and on a commercial naphthenic acid mixture show a progressive
increase with increasing temperature in the concentration of monomer
over the multimers, which drives the formation of iron naphthenate.
This observation forms a reasonable basis for proposing a mechanism
of corrosion in crude oil at temperatures closer to the boiling point
of naphthenic acids, which proceeds through the acid monomer