The properties of Protein enzyme biosurfactant, a green-enzyme, water-based inert-enzyme generated from the DNA of microbes that eat oil was studied to ascertain its applicability in EOR processes. A light crude oil of 0.908 g/cc at 22°C density and 53.87 cp viscosity was used in this study with a kinematic viscosity which was variable between 90.654 mm2/s to 13.7544 mm2/s between temperatures of 22.5 °C to 70 °C with a measured surface tension of about 35 mN/m. The bio-surfactant yielded a CMC value of 0.02 wt.% which is comparable to reported CMC values of other surfactants. The least IFT value measured was 4.0 mN/m, which is very high for a very efficient and effective residual oil recovery (an ultralow IFT of about 0.01mN/m is required of which was achievable by Rhamnolipid a bio-surfactant studied alongside Protein Enzyme in this work). Ionic (0.083M to 3.0M) and temperature (23 to 70 °C) effects did not have much influence on the activities of bio-surfactant, thus quite stable within such conditions. The protein-enzyme has the ability to form a Winsor type III emulsion and stable over the period of time studied. Adsorption was noticed especially with higher bio-surfactant concentrations but tends to be stable over time.
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