This work presents a systematic study of asphaltene pre-aggregation
phenomena in the absence and in the presence of ionic liquids (ILs)
from the family of 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium by molecular dynamics
simulations. The effects of the alkyl chain length of the cation (studying
ILs with alkyl chains between C4 and C10) and
of the dimension of the anion (testing chloride and bromide) on the
aggregation behavior of asphaltenes have been studied. To correlate
the results obtained with the direct interaction between each additive
and asphaltene, the latter was investigated both by the analysis of
the radial distribution functions obtained by molecular dynamics simulations
and quantum mechanical calculations. The DFT method was used to calculate
the relative stability of the asphaltene-ionic liquid dimers and also
the energy, shape, and spatial distribution of frontier orbitals.
It was found that all the ionic liquids studied present a dispersing
effect on asphaltene in model solvents, except for mixtures rich in
toluene where, in most cases, the opposite effect is observed. This
is accompanied by the interaction intensity as measured by radial
distribution functions. The effects of the alkyl side chain length
of the cation and of the anion radius are subtler, but it seems that
the asphaltene dispersion effect increases with the length of the
cation’s alkyl side chain and decreases with the radius of
the anion; these effects are more clearly observed in the mixtures
richer in n-heptane. These trends were corroborated
by DFT calculations, which showed that the energetic stability of
the asphaltene-additive dimer is as higher as the alkyl chain is longer
and the anion is smaller. Pre-aggregation phenomena were also studied
in mixtures containing CO2, which proved to be a precipitating
agent as observed experimentally. The relative performances of the
IL studied were not altered by the presence of CO2.
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