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Oil contact angles in a water-decane-silicon dioxide system: Effects of surface charge

  • Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration and Development

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

Oil wettability in the water-oil-rock systems is very sensitive to the evolution of surface charges on the rock surfaces induced by the adsorption of ions and other chemical agents in water flooding. Through a set of large-scale molecular dynamics simulations, we reveal the effects of surface charge on the oil contact angles in an ideal water-decane-silicon dioxide system. The results show that the contact angles of oil nano-droplets have a great dependence on the surface charges. As the surface charge density exceeds a critical value of 0.992 e/nm2, the contact angle reaches up to 78.8° and the water-wet state is very apparent. The variation of contact angles can be confirmed from the number density distributions of oil molecules. With increasing the surface charge density, the adsorption of oil molecules weakens and the contact areas between nano-droplets and silicon dioxide surface are reduced. In addition, the number density distributions, RDF distributions, and molecular orientations indicate that the oil molecules are adsorbed on the silicon dioxide surface layer-by-layer with an orientation parallel to the surface. However, the layered structure of oil molecules near the silicon dioxide surface becomes more and more obscure at higher surface charge densities.

Original languageEnglish
Article number108
JournalNanoscale Research Letters
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018

Keywords

  • Molecular dynamics
  • Oil wettability
  • Silicon dioxide surface
  • Surface charge

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