Self-Soluble Hydrophobically Associating Polyacrylamide
Inverse Emulsions with Extraordinary Thickening Properties
Posted on 2024-04-03 - 19:03
Polyacrylamide-based
inverse emulsions are one class of fascinating
products possessing excellent aqueous thickening ability, rapid solubility,
and tailorable properties in many industrial fields, but further improvement
of their performances and simplification of their applicational operations
are still challenging. Traditionally, post-addition of an inverting
agent into the produced inverse emulsion is necessary to enable the
product to become soluble in water. In this study, cetylmethyldiallylammonium
chloride (CMDAAC) and stearyl methacrylate (SMA) were used as functional
monomers to copolymerize with traditional monomers acrylamide, acrylic
acid, and 2-acrylamide-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid, achieving inverting
agent-free self-soluble hydrophobically associating polyacrylamide
(HAPAM)-based inverse emulsions with high monomer conversion (>97%)
and high molecular weights (>10 million Da). With an increasing
SMA
dosage in recipes, the micelle sizes of the obtained emulsions become
smaller, and thickening ability, shearing property, temperature and
salinity tolerances, as well as synergism with sodium dodecyl sulfate
of the obtained polymers in aqueous solutions were increasingly enhanced
due to the improved hydrophobic interactions. For SMA-containing polymers,
0.5–1.5 mol % SMA dosages make the obtained polymers desensitized
to temperature, and even a slight thermo-thickening effect is observed
for 2.0 mol % SMA dosage samples. Meanwhile, the introduction of CMDAAC
and/or SMA imparts polymers with remarkable salt-thickening behavior
at an NaCl concentration above a certain value, and the inflection
points shift to lower NaCl concentrations with increasing SMA contents.
This work presents a species of inverting agent-free self-soluble
high-performance HAPAM inverse emulsions with great applicational
potentials in harsh conditions for oil and gas development.