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1.
ACS Omega ; 7(2): 1547-1574, 2022 Jan 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35071852

ABSTRACT

An increasing global population and a sharply upward trajectory of per capita energy consumption continue to drive the demand for fossil fuels, which remain integral to energy grids and the global transportation infrastructure. The oil and gas industry is increasingly reliant on unconventional deposits such as heavy crude oil and bitumen for reasons of accessibility, scale, and geopolitics. Unconventional deposits such as the Canadian Oil Sands in Northern Alberta contain more than one-third of the world's viscous oil reserves and are vital linchpins to meet the energy needs of rapidly industrializing populations. Heavy oil is typically recovered from subsurface deposits using thermal recovery approaches such as steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD). In this perspective article, we discuss several aspects of materials science challenges in the utilization of heavy crude oil with an emphasis on the needs of the Canadian Oil Sands. In particular, we discuss surface modification and materials' design approaches essential to operations under extreme environments of high temperatures and pressures and the presence of corrosive species. The demanding conditions for materials and surfaces are directly traceable to the high viscosity, low surface tension, and substantial sulfur content of heavy crude oil, which necessitates extensive energy-intensive thermal processes, warrants dilution/emulsification to ease the flow of rheologically challenging fluids, and engenders the need to protect corrodible components. Geopolitical reasons have further led to a considerable geographic separation between extraction sites and advanced refineries capable of processing heavy oils to a diverse slate of products, thus necessitating a massive midstream infrastructure for transportation of these rheologically challenging fluids. Innovations in fluid handling, bitumen processing, and midstream transportation are critical to the economic viability of heavy oil. Here, we discuss foundational principles, recent technological advancements, and unmet needs emphasizing candidate solutions for thermal insulation, membrane-assisted separations, corrosion protection, and midstream bitumen transportation. This perspective seeks to highlight illustrative materials' technology developments spanning the range from nanocomposite coatings and cement sheaths for thermal insulation to the utilization of orthogonal wettability to engender separation of water-oil emulsions stabilized by endogenous surfactants extracted during SAGD, size-exclusion membranes for fractionation of bitumen, omniphobic coatings for drag reduction in pipelines and to ease oil handling in containers, solid prills obtained from partial bitumen solidification to enable solid-state transport with reduced risk of damage from spills, and nanocomposite coatings incorporating multiple modes of corrosion inhibition. Future outlooks for onsite partial upgradation are also described, which could potentially bypass the use of refineries for some fractions, enable access to a broader cross-section of refineries, and enable a new distributed chemical manufacturing paradigm.

2.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 12(45): 11170-11175, 2021 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34757751

ABSTRACT

Rare-earth scheelites represent a diverse family of compounds with multiple degrees of freedom, which enables the incorporation of a wide range of lanthanide color centers. Precise positioning of quantum objects is attainable by the choice of alkali cations and lattice connectivity of polyanion units. Herein, we report the structure-dependent energy transfer and lattice coupling of optical transitions in La3+- and Dy3+-containing scheelite-type double and quadruple molybdates NaLa1-xDyx(MoO4)2 and Na5La1-xDyx(MoO4)4. X-ray excitation of La3+ core states generates excited-state electron-hole pairs, which, upon thermalizing across interconnected REO8 polyhedra in double molybdates, activate a phonon-coupled excited state of Dy3+. A pronounced luminescence band is observed corresponding to optical cooling of the lattice upon preferential radiative relaxation from a "hot" state. In contrast, combined X-ray absorption near-edge structure and X-ray-excited optical luminescence studies reveal that such a lattice coupling mechanism is inaccessible in quadruple molybdates with a greater separation of La3+-Dy3+ centers.

3.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(28): 15582-15589, 2021 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33783069

ABSTRACT

A challenge in anion control in periodic solids is to preserve the crystal lattice while substituting for different anions of widely varying size and hardness. Post-synthetic modification routes that place cations or anions in non-equilibrium configurations are promising; however, such methods remain relatively unexplored for anion placement. Here, we report the synthesis of LaOI nanocrystals by a non-hydrolytic sol-gel condensation reaction and their transformation into LaOBr, LaOCl, and LaOF nanocrystals along hard-soft acid-base principles using post-synthetic metathesis reactions with ammonium halides. Anion displacement proceeds along halide planes, preserving the tetragonal matlockite structure. Energy-variant X-ray excited optical luminesce signatures of alloyed Tb3+ -ions is a sensitive quantum reporter of the preservation of the cation sublattice and hardening of the crystal structure upon anion replacement.

4.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 16149, 2018 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30385763

ABSTRACT

The significant heat loss and severe thermal fluctuations inherent in steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) and cyclic steam stimulation (CSS) impose considerable constraints on well cementing. In order to obtain better energy efficiency and mechanical robustness, there is considerable interest in the development of low-thermal-conductivity cement that can provide a combination of enhanced thermal insulation and mechanical resilience upon thermal cycling. However, the current palette of thermal cements is exceedingly sparse. In this article, we illustrate a method for decreasing the thermal conductivity of cement by inclusion of hydroxyethylcellulose-functionalized halloysite nanotubes. Halloysite/hydroxyethylcellulose inclusions offer an abundance of disparate interfaces and void space that can effectively scatter phonons, thereby bringing about a pronounced reduction of thermal conductivity. The microstructure of the nanocomposite cementitious matrix is strongly modified even as the compositional profile remains essentially unaltered. Modified cement nanocomposites incorporating halloysite nanotubes along with hydroxyethylcellulose in a 8:1 ratio with an overall loading of 2 wt.% exhibit the lowest measured thermal conductivity of 0.212 ± 0.003 W/m.K, which is substantially reduced from the thermal conductivity of unmodified cement (1.252 W/m.K). The ability to substantially decrease thermal conductivity without deleterious modification of mechanical properties through alteration of microstructure, inclusion of encapsulated void spaces, and introduction of multiple phonon-scattering interfaces suggests an entirely new approach to oilwell cementing based on the design of tailored nanocomposites.

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