RI 5370 Metal-Porphyrin Complexes In An Asphaltic Midcontinent Crude Oil ? Summary And Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
John W. Moore
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
28
File Size:
8791 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1957

Abstract

The discovery of porphyries in petroleum by Treibs (17-19) is one of the most significant achievements relating to the origin of petroleum. The presence of these remnants of chlorophyll and hematin in petroleum has immediate practical interest in several aspects of the petroleum industry. Because of their interfacial activities and film-forming tendencies, the metal-porphyrin complexes may be expected to affect the wettability of petroleum-reservoir rock surfaces and influence the flow of fluids in these reservoirs. Also, studies of the relationship of trace elements and porphyrins in petroleum may be expected to yield valuable information on source beds and petroleum migration. Finally, the extreme stability of several metal-porphyrin complexes complicates removal of these metals from some petroleum stocks where they exert deleterious effects on processing and utilization. Metal-porphyrin complexes are commonly associated with the asphaltic residues of crude oils in which they occur (8, 9, 15). However, investigations in this and another laboratory (15) show that small amounts of these complexes often remain in partly refined petroleum products, such as thermally cracked distillates and deasphalted stocks.
Citation

APA: John W. Moore  (1957)  RI 5370 Metal-Porphyrin Complexes In An Asphaltic Midcontinent Crude Oil ? Summary And Introduction

MLA: John W. Moore RI 5370 Metal-Porphyrin Complexes In An Asphaltic Midcontinent Crude Oil ? Summary And Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1957.

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