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Influence of Wax Inhibitor Molecular Weight on Solution Crystallization and Rheology of Monodisperse Waxes

Molecular weight fractionation via stepwise precipitation or chain scission is performed on four pour point depressant polymers to study the pour point reduction mechanism. An homologous series of model oils is prepared by dissolving 5 wt % of a single-component paraffin wax (n-C24, n-C28, n-C32, or...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kurniawan, Muh, Ruwoldt, Jost, Norrman, Jens, Paso, Kristofer Gunnar
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Request full text
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Summary:Molecular weight fractionation via stepwise precipitation or chain scission is performed on four pour point depressant polymers to study the pour point reduction mechanism. An homologous series of model oils is prepared by dissolving 5 wt % of a single-component paraffin wax (n-C24, n-C28, n-C32, or n-C36) in n-C12. The polymers are dosed at 500 ppm in the model oils and moderately reduce crystallization temperatures by elevating the nucleation barrier. Polymers containing carboxylate or acrylate moieties also modestly enhance equilibrium wax solubility. Reduction in crystallization temperature is largely independent of polymer molecular weight, except for carboxylate polymers where low molecular weight fractions are largely ineffective. In general, model fluids containing shorter wax chains show a larger reduction in crystallization temperature than model fluids containing longer wax chains. However, yield stress reduction often shows a distinct dependence on polymer molar mass. Low molecular weight fractions of carboxylate and acrylate polymers provide smaller reductions in yield stress than the overall parent fraction. Cross-polarized microscopy reveals that polymers reduce the crystal size, alter the crystal morphology from platelet to needle-like, and induce branching. Crystal branching and formation of dendrite-like structures result from strong polymer binding at the wax crystal interfaces. Hence, single-component wax crystal branching occurs phenomenologically along with yield stress reduction.
ISSN:7666-7680