Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 19 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Influence of Asphaltenes on the Low-Sulphur Residual Marine Fuels? Stability

Ksenia I. Smyshlyaeva    
Viacheslav A. Rudko    
Vladimir G. Povarov    
Alina A. Shaidulina    
Ignaty Efimov    
Renat R. Gabdulkhakov    
Igor N. Pyagay and James G. Speight    

Resumen

The effects of asphaltenes from two heavy oil residues on the sedimentation stability of residual marine fuels were assessed and compared. As base components of residual marine fuels, the vacuum residue (VacRes) and visbreaking residue (VisRes) were taken. The heptane-insoluble fractions (HI-fractions), including asphaltenes, isolated from vacuum residue and visbreaking residue, were analyzed to determine the elemental composition (XRF) and cluster parameters (XRD). The results of the analysis of the parameters of the asphaltene cluster (HI-fraction) for vacuum residue and visbreaking residue showed that d? ? 6.1 and 5.9 Å, Lc ? 26.72 and 20.78 Å, and La ? 7.68 and 7.20 Å. The sedimentation stability of residual marine fuel was determined according to the ISO 10307-1-2009 (TSA) method and described using ternary phase diagrams. The ratio of stable compositions to the total number of possible compositions (with a step of 10 wt%) was 65/66 or 98.5% for residual marine fuel comprising a mixture VacRes/ULSD/LCGO (vacuum residue/ultra-low sulphur diesel/light catalytic gas oil). Meanwhile, the ratio of stable compositions to the total number of possible compositions was 38/66 or 57.6% for residual marine fuel comprising a mixture VisRes/ULSD/LCGO (visbreaking residue/ultra-low sulphur diesel/light catalytic gas oil).

 Artículos similares

       
 
Lingli Zhang, Chengming Luo, Xiyun Ge, Yuxin Cao, Haobo Zhang and Gaifang Xin    
The efficient coverage of underwater wireless sensor networks (UWSNs) has become increasingly important because of the scarcity of underwater node resources. Complex underwater environments, water flow forces, and undulating seabed reduce the coverage ef... ver más

 
Shauna Creane, Michael O?Shea, Mark Coughlan and Jimmy Murphy    
Offshore anthropogenic activities such as the installation of Offshore Renewable Energy (ORE) developments and sediment extraction for marine aggregates have been shown to disrupt current flow, wave propagation, and sediment transport pathways, leading t... ver más

 
Jianwei Zeng, Xuegang Chen, Shidi Jin and Jiajia Fan    
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) caused by Heterosigma akashiwo are occurring in coastal waters frequently, posing a great risk to marine environments and subsequent treatment processes like desalination. UV-assisted permanganate oxidation (UV/KMnO4) is recog... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Qianlong Jin, Yu Tian, Weicong Zhan, Qiming Sang, Jiancheng Yu and Xiaohui Wang    
Efficiently predicting high-resolution and accurate flow fields through networked autonomous marine vehicles (AMVs) is crucial for diverse applications. Nonetheless, a research gap exists in the seamless integration of data-driven flow modeling, real-tim... ver más

 
Sen Lin, Ruihang Zhang, Zemeng Ning and Jie Luo    
The underwater images acquired by marine detectors inevitably suffer from quality degradation due to color distortion and the haze effect. Traditional methods are ineffective in removing haze, resulting in the residual haze being intensified during color... ver más