ABSTRACT
Recently a series of first contact miscibility (swelling) experiments have been performed on undersaturated light and heavy oils using LPG rich and methane rich injection gases, in which solid organic deposition was observed. A compositional gradient in the oils during the gas injection process was also evident as oil fractions expelled from the top to bottom of the PVT cell were observed to vary in density, molecular weight, as well as darkness of color. The change in stability of the oil samples before and after the contact with gas was analyzed using flocculation threshold titration. The asphaltene content of the different oil samples were determined by the IP 143 method. The standard asphaltenes and the solid organic deposit recovered from the swelling tests were analyzed using FTIR, HPLC-SEC and 1H NMR. The aim of these analyses is to reveal the molecular nature of the deposits formed during the gas injection process in comparison with the standard asphaltenes in order to understand the mechanisms involved in asphaltene deposition.