Publications Internationales

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    Rheological behavior and microstructural properties of crude oil and emulsions (water/oil-oil/water)
    (Taylor & Francis, 2024) Yacine, Celia; Safri, Abdelhamid; Djemiat, Djamal Eddine; Benmounah, Abdelbaki
    An experimental study on crude oil (from the Tin Fouye Tabankort oil field in southern Algeria) was carried out. This study allowed us to understand the rheological behavior of this crude oil with these different emulsions and how it reacts under the effects of temperature and the inversion of its phase from E/H to H/E. So we measured the rheological characteristics by tests flow and dynamic mode at different temperatures from 10 °C to 50 °C and at different water concentrations (20.40.50.60 and 70%) at a fixed temperature of 20 °C. The increase in temperature results in a 31.84% reduction in the initial viscosity of the crude oil. The addition of the volumic fractions of water results in an increase in viscosity at the point of inverse, which will decrease the apparent viscosity of these emulsions where the emulsions (W/O) come from (O/W). This crude oil and their emulsions exhibit a non-Newtonian behavior with shear thinning. The dynamic analysis depends on the temperature and the percentages of water added to the crude oil. At the end, a microscopic analysis was added to verify the relationship between the shape and diameter of the water droplets in each emulsion and the viscosity variation.
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    Rheological behavior of Algerian crude oil: effect of temperature and refined product
    (Taylor and Francis Online, 2018) Souas, Farid; Safri, Abdelhamid; Benmounah, Abdelbaki; Djemiat, Djamal Eddine
    The rheological behavior and its variation with temperature and refined product concentration of a crude oil sample coming from a quagmire of the separation station of Tin Fouye Tabankort oilfield/southern Algeria were investigated experimentally. The experiments were carried out at various temperatures (20, 30 and 50 °C) over the shear rate range of 0 to 700 s−1 by using a controlled stress rheometer (AR 2000, TA Instrument). The results showed that the crude oil exhibit non-Newtonian of shear thinning behavior at low shear rate and Newtonian behavior at high shear rate and was adequately described by Casson and Herschel–Bulkley models. The rheological measurements through the steady flow test and viscoelastic behavior, including the storage modulus (G′), loss modulus (G″), and complex modulus (G*), has indicated that the rheological properties of the crude oil were greatly influenced by the temperature and the additive concentration.