15 research outputs found

    Facile Synthesis and Special Phase Transformation of Hydrophilic Iron Oxides Nanoparticles

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    Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs), γ-Fe2O3, with hydrophilic surfaces are fabricated in ethylene glycol solutions, without surfactant or additive, by solvothermal process from α-Fe2O3 nanoparticle as precursors. With the addition of a trace of hydrazine hydrate, the cubic phase Fe3O4 nanoparticles are obtained instead of γ-Fe2O3. The saturation magnetization value of γ-Fe2O3 nanoparticles is up to 74.3 emu/g. This study provides a low cost, safe, and universal route to serve as excellent biocompatibility magnetic core for future applications in biomedical, agriculture, and horticulture applications

    Optimized hydrophobic magnetic nanoparticles stabilized pickering emulsion for enhanced oil recovery in complex porous media of reservoir

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    With an extensive application of flooding technologies in oil recovery, traditional emulsion flooding has seen many limits due to its poor stability and easy demulsification. Pursuing a new robust emulsion plays a fundamental role in developing highly effective emulsion flooding technology. In this work, a novel Pickering emulsion with special magnetic nanoparticles Fe3O4@PDA@Si was designed and prepared. To disclose the flooding mechanism from magnetic nanoparticles, the physico-chemical characterization of Fe3O4@PDA@Si was systematically examined. Meanwhile, the flooding property of the constructed Pickering emulsion was evaluated on the basis of certain downhole conditions. The results showed that the synthesis of Fe3O4@PDA@Si nanoparticles was found to have a hydrophobic core-shell structure with a diameter of 30 nm. Pickering emulsions based on Fe3O4@PDA@Si nanoparticles at an oil-to-water ratio of 5:5, 50°C, the water separation rate was only 6% and the droplet diameter of the emulsion was approximately 15 μm in the ultra-depth-of-field microscope image. This demonstrates the excellent stability of Pickering emulsions and improves the problem of easy demulsification. We further discussed the oil displacement mechanism and enhanced oil recovery effect of this type of emulsion. The microscopic flooding experiment demonstrated that profile control of the Pickering emulsion played a more important role in enhanced recovery than emulsification denudation, with the emulsion system increasing oil recovery by 10.18% in the micro model. Core flooding experiments have established that the incremental oil recovery of the Pickering emulsion increases with decreasing core permeability, from 12.36% to 17.39% as permeability drops from 834.86 to 219.34 × 10−3 μm2. This new Pickering emulsion flooding system stabilized by Fe3O4@PDA@Si nanoparticles offers an option for enhanced oil recovery (EOR)

    A molecular bowl with barium ion as bottom

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    A molecular bowl with barium ion covering one portal of decamethylcucurbit[5]uril as a 'metal-ion-bottom' has been synthesized. The structure of the molecular bowl has been confirmed by the single crystal X-ray diffraction determination. It belongs to orthorhombic with space group of Pna2(1). The crystal unit cell parameters are: a=3.2108(6) nm, b=1.4742(3) nm, c=1.151 6(2) run, and V=5.4509(18) nm(3), D-c=1.677 Mg(.)m(3), Z=4, F(000)= 2832, R=0.0551, wR=0.1568

    Robust estimation of bacterial cell count from optical density

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    Optical density (OD) is widely used to estimate the density of cells in liquid culture, but cannot be compared between instruments without a standardized calibration protocol and is challenging to relate to actual cell count. We address this with an interlaboratory study comparing three simple, low-cost, and highly accessible OD calibration protocols across 244 laboratories, applied to eight strains of constitutive GFP-expressing E. coli. Based on our results, we recommend calibrating OD to estimated cell count using serial dilution of silica microspheres, which produces highly precise calibration (95.5% of residuals <1.2-fold), is easily assessed for quality control, also assesses instrument effective linear range, and can be combined with fluorescence calibration to obtain units of Molecules of Equivalent Fluorescein (MEFL) per cell, allowing direct comparison and data fusion with flow cytometry measurements: in our study, fluorescence per cell measurements showed only a 1.07-fold mean difference between plate reader and flow cytometry data

    Study on distribution of reservoir endogenous microbe and oil displacement mechanism

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    In order to research oil displacement mechanism by indigenous microbial communities under reservoir conditions, indigenous microbial flooding experiments using the endogenous mixed bacterium from Shengli Oilfield were carried out. Through microscopic simulation visual model, observation and analysis of distribution and flow of the remaining oil in the process of water flooding and microbial oil displacement were conducted under high temperature and high pressure conditions. Research has shown that compared with atmospheric conditions, the growth of the microorganism metabolism and attenuation is slowly under high pressure conditions, and the existence of the porous medium for microbial provides good adhesion, also makes its growth cycle extension. The microbial activities can effectively launch all kinds of residual oil, and can together with metabolites, enter the blind holes off which water flooding, polymer flooding and gas flooding can’t sweep, then swap out remaining oil, increase liquidity of the crude oil and remarkably improve oil displacement effect

    Swelling Mechanism of Core-Shell Polymeric Nanoparticles and Their Application in Enhanced Oil Recovery for Low-Permeability Reservoirs

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    Nanotechnology provides potential benefits for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) in low-permeability reservoirs. In this paper, SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) composite nanoparticles were prepared using the distillation precipitation polymerization method. Scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and thermogravimetric analysis were employed to characterize the morphology and microstructure of nanoparticles. The swelling behavior of polymeric nanoparticles in brine was investigated to evaluate the effect of salinity and temperature. Kinetic and thermodynamic analyses were employed to reveal the swelling mechanism. Displacement experiments were performed to investigate their performance in EOR in low-permeability reservoirs. The results show that the swelling ratio of SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) composite nanoparticles is higher at low salinity and high temperature, which can be explained by the Flory theory. The swelling process is spontaneous and endothermic, being controlled by physical adsorption involving the diffusion of water molecules, which complies with the first-order kinetics model. The suspension of SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) composite nanoparticles can improve incremental oil recovery from 10.28 to 21.97% with an increase of the swelled particle size from 580 to 1160 nm. It is feasible that core-shell polymeric nanoparticles can be used for EOR in low-permeability reservoirs

    From Silver Nanoflakes to Silver Nanonets: An Effective Trade-Off between Conductivity and Stretchability of Flexible Electrodes

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    Flexible and stretchable conductive materials have received significant attention due to their numerous potential applications in flexible printed electronics. In this paper, we describe a new type of conductive filler for flexible electrodes—silver nanonets prepared through the “dissolution–recrystallization” solvothermal route from porous silver nanoflakes. These new silver fillers show characteristics of both nanoflakes and nanoparticles with propensity to form interpenetrating polymer–silver networks. This effectively minimizes trade-off between composite electrode conductivity and stretchability and enables fabrication of the flexible electrodes simultaneously exhibiting high conductivity and mechanical durability. For example, an electrode with uniform, networked silver structure from the flakiest silver particles showed the lowest increase of resistivity upon extension (3500%), compared to that of the electrode filled with less flaky (3D) particles (>50,000%)

    Threshold Pore Pressure Gradients in Water-Bearing Tight Sandstone Gas Reservoirs

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    Tight gas reservoirs commonly occur in clastic formations having a complex pore structure and a high water saturation, which results in a threshold pressure gradient (TPG) for gas seepage. The micropore characteristics of a tight sandstone gas reservoir (Tuha oilfield, Xinjiang, China) were studied, based on X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy and high pressure mercury testing. The TPG of gas in cores of the tight gas reservoir was investigated under various water saturation conditions, paying special attention to core permeability and water saturation impact on the TPG. A mathematical TPG model applied a multiple linear regression method to evaluate the influence of core permeability and water saturation. The results show that the tight sandstone gas reservoir has a high content of clay minerals, and especially a large proportion of illite–smectite mixed layers. The pore diameter is distributed below 1 micron, comprising mesopores and micropores. With a decrease of reservoir permeability, the number of micropores increases sharply. Saturated water tight cores show an obvious non-linear seepage characteristic, and the TPG of gas increases with a decrease of core permeability or an increase of water saturation. The TPG model has a high prediction accuracy and shows that permeability has a greater impact on TPG at high water saturation, while water saturation has a greater impact on TPG at low permeability

    Experimental Research on Seepage Law and Migration Characteristics of Core-Shell Polymeric Nanoparticles Dispersion System in Porous Media

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    The nanoparticles dispersion system has complex migration characteristics and percolation law in porous media due to the interaction between the nanoparticles and porous media. In this paper, lab experiments were carried out to characterize the morphology, particle size distributions, and apparent viscosities of SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticle solution, investigate its migration characteristics in porous media, and probe its capability of enhanced oil recovery (EOR) in the reservoirs. Quartz microtubule, sand pack, and etched glass micromodels were used as the porous media in the flow and flooding experiments. Gray image-processing technology was applied to achieve oil saturation at different flooding stages in the micromodel for calculating the EOR of the SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticle solution. The results show that The SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticles are spherical with diameters ranging from 260 to 300 nm, and the thicknesses of the polymeric layers are in the range of 30–50 nm. As the swelling time increases from 24 to 120 h, the medium sizes of the SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticles increase from 584.45 to 1142.61 nm. The flow of the SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticles has obvious nonlinear characteristics and a prominent scale effect at a low-pressure gradient, and there should be an optimal matching relationship between its injection mass concentration and the channel size. The flow tests in the sand packs demonstrate that the SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticles can form effective plugging in the main flow channels at different permeability areas and can break through at the throat to fulfill the step-by-step profile control. Moreover, the profile control of the SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticles strengthens with an increase in their swelling time. The microscopic flooding experiment in the etched glass micromodel confirms that the SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticles can block dynamically and alternatively the channels of different sizes with the form of loose or dense networks to adjust the fluid flow diversion, improve the sweep efficiency, and recover more residual oil. The SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticles can achieve an enhanced oil recovery of 20.71% in the micromodel

    Enhanced Oil Recovery by a Suspension of Core-Shell Polymeric Nanoparticles in Heterogeneous Low-Permeability Oil Reservoirs

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    Polymeric nanoparticle suspension is a newly developed oil-displacing agent for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) in low-permeability reservoirs. In this work, SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) polymeric nanoparticles were successfully synthesized by a simple distillation–precipitation polymerization method. Due to the introduction of polymer, the SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) nanoparticles show a favorable swelling performance in aqueous solution, and their particle sizes increase from 631 to 1258 nm as the swelling times increase from 24 to 120 h. The apparent viscosity of SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) suspension increases with an increase of mass concentration and swelling time, whereas it decreases as the salinity and temperature increase. The SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) suspension behaves like a non-Newtonian fluid at lower shear rates, yet like a Newtonian fluid at shear rates greater than 300 s−1. The EOR tests of the SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) suspension in heterogeneous, low-permeability cores show that SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) nanoparticles can effectively improve the sweep efficiency and recover more residual oils. A high permeability ratio can result in a high incremental oil recovery in parallel cores. With an increase of the permeability ratio of parallel cores from 1.40 to 15.49, the ratios of incremental oil recoveries (low permeability/high permeability) change from 7.69/4.61 to 23.61/8.46. This work demonstrates that this SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) suspension is an excellent conformance control agent for EOR in heterogeneous, low-permeability reservoirs. The findings of this study can help to further the understanding of the mechanisms of EOR using SiO2/P(MBAAm-co-AM) suspension in heterogeneous, low-permeability reservoirs
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