Treatment
with pour point depressant (PPD) can significantly improve
the cold flowability of waxy crude oil, enabling the safe and efficient
transportation of waxy crude oils through pipelines. It has been observed
that the electrical properties of waxy oil, such as the dielectric
constant, ζ-potential, etc., change upon PPD treatment. In a
previous study, we reported that wax precipitation results in a significant
change of impedance spectroscopy (IS) of a waxy oil, i.e., a second
semicircle appears in the Nyquist diagram and becomes increasingly
bigger with increasing amount of precipitated wax. In this study,
we found that the addition of PPD may significantly reduce the second
semicircle, and the more effective the PPD is, the more reduced the
second semicircle will be. Equivalent circuit models suggest that
the impedance characteristics of the liquid phase of wax-in-oil suspension
change little with PPD addition, but the capacitance of wax particles
increases and the resistance of wax particles decreases significantly.
A positive correlation between the viscosity reduction and the reduction
of resistance of wax particles caused by PPD is discovered. After
PPD treatment, the polar functional groups in PPD molecules potentially
induce charge on wax particles as they precipitate, causing the relationship
between the viscosity and conductivity to approach the fractional
Walden rule. This work explains the reason for the improvement of
flowability upon PPD addition from a perspective of IS, which provides
some new proofs to understanding the functional mechanism of PPD.
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