Asphaltenes have been suggested to
play an important role in the
remarkable stability of some water-in-crude oil emulsions, although
the precise mechanisms by which they act are not yet fully understood.
Being one of the more polar fractions in crude oils, asphaltenes are
surface active and strongly adsorb at the oil/water interface, and
as the interface becomes densely packed, solid-like mechanical properties
emerge, which influence many typical interfacial experiments. The
present work focuses on purposefully measuring the rheology in the
limit of an insoluble, spread Langmuir monolayer in the absence of
adsorption/desorption phenomena. Moreover, the changes in surface
tension are deconvoluted from the purely mechanical contribution to
the surface stress by experiments with precise interfacial kinematics.
Compression “isotherms” are combined with the measurement
of both shear and dilatational rheological properties to evaluate
the relative contributions of mechanical versus thermodynamic aspects,
i.e., to evaluate the “interfacial rheological” versus
the standard interfacial activity. The experimental results suggest
that asphaltene nanoaggregates are not very efficient in lowering
interfacial tension but rather impart significant mechanical stresses.
Interestingly, physical aging effects are not observed in the spread
layers, contrary to results for adsorbed layers. By further studying
asphaltene fractions of different polarity, we investigate whether
mere packing effects or strong interactions determine the mechanical
response of the dense asphaltene systems as either soft glassy or
gel-like responses have been reported. The compressional and rheological
data reflect the dense packing, and the behavior is captured well
by the soft glassy rheology model, but a more complicated multilayer
structure may develop as coverage is increased. Potential implications
of the experimental observations on these model and insoluble interfaces
for water-in-crude oil emulsion stability are briefly discussed.