Journal of Siberian Federal University. Chemistry / Change in the Structure of Asphaltene Macromolecules of the Krapivinskoye Oil Field During Biological Oxidation

Full text (.pdf)
Issue
Journal of Siberian Federal University. Chemistry. 2021 14 (2)
Authors
Cheshkova, Tatyana V.; Sagachenko, Tatyana A.; Min, Raisa S.; Philatov, Dmitriy A.
Contact information
Cheshkova, Tatyana V.: Institute of Petroleum Chemistry SB RAS Tomsk, Russian Federation; ; Sagachenko, Tatyana A.: Institute of Petroleum Chemistry SB RAS Tomsk, Russian Federation; Min, Raisa S.: Institute of Petroleum Chemistry SB RAS Tomsk, Russian Federation; Philatov, Dmitriy A.: Institute of Petroleum Chemistry SB RAS Tomsk, Russian Federation
Keywords
asphaltenes; biodegradation; chemical degradation; composition
Abstract

Using physico-chemical methods of research (elemental analysis, infrared spectroscopy, selective chemical destruction of sulfide and ester bonds, chromatomass spectrometry) the influence of biodegradation processes on the composition and structure of asphaltenes of light oil at the Krapivinskoye deposit was studied. The results of comparative characteristics of initial asphaltenes and asphaltenes after biodestruction are presented. Attention is paid to studying their structural parameters and composition of fragments bound in asphaltene molecules through ester and sulfide bridges. It has been shown that microbial oxidation of asphaltenes of light oil by aboriginal soil microflora (laboratory experiment) occurs through a series of catalytic processes with formation of intermediate products of transformation – alcohols, aldehydes, ketones and fatty acids. It has been established that “grey and ether-bound” fragments in asphaltene molecules of biodegradable oil differ from “bound” compounds in the structure of the original asphaltenes with the qualitative composition of saturated and aromatic hydrocarbons and heteroatomic components

Pages
252–262
DOI
10.17516/1998-2836-0234
Paper at repository of SibFU
https://elib.sfu-kras.ru/handle/2311/141336