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Dive into the research topics where Andrew J. Worthen is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew J. Worthen.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2013

Nanoparticle-stabilized carbon dioxide-in-water foams with fine texture

Andrew J. Worthen; Hitesh G. Bagaria; Yunshen Chen; Steven L. Bryant; Chun Huh; Keith P. Johnston

The concept of hydrophilic/CO(2)-philic balance (HCB) was extended to describe stabilization of carbon dioxide-in-water (C/W) foams (also called emulsions) with silica nanoparticles adsorbed at the CO(2)-water interface. Opaque, white C/W foams (bubble diameter <100 μm) were generated with either PEG-coated silica or methylsilyl modified silica nanoparticles in a beadpack with CO(2) densities between 0.2 and 0.9 g mL(-1). For methylsilyl modified silica nanoparticles, 50% SiOH modification provided an optimal HCB for generation and stabilization of viscous C/W foams with high stability. The apparent viscosity measured with a capillary tube viscometer reached 120-fold that of a CO(2)-water mixture without nanoparticles, a consequence of the small bubble size and the energy required to deform a high density of aqueous lamellae between CO(2) bubbles. Air-in-water (A/W) foams stabilized with nanoparticles were used to gain insight into the relationship between nanoparticle surface properties and adsorption of the nanoparticles at various types of interfaces. With suitable nanoparticles, A/W foams were stable for at least 7 days and C/W foams were stable for at least 23 h. The ability to achieve long term stability for nanoparticle stabilized C/W foams could offer an alternative to conventional surfactants, which are known to have much lower adsorption energies.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2013

Iron oxide nanoparticles grafted with sulfonated copolymers are stable in concentrated brine at elevated temperatures and weakly adsorb on silica.

Hitesh G. Bagaria; Zheng Xue; Bethany M. Neilson; Andrew J. Worthen; Ki Youl Yoon; Susheela Nayak; Victoria Cheng; Jae Ho Lee; Christopher W. Bielawski; Keith P. Johnston

Magnetic nanoparticles that can be transported in subsurface reservoirs at high salinities and temperatures are expected to have a major impact on enhanced oil recovery, carbon dioxide sequestration, and electromagnetic imaging. Herein we report a rare example of steric stabilization of iron oxide (IO) nanoparticles (NPs) grafted with poly(2-acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonate-co-acrylic acid) (poly(AMPS-co-AA)) that not only display colloidal stability in standard American Petroleum Institute (API) brine (8% NaCl + 2% CaCl2 by weight) at 90 °C for 1 month but also resist undesirable adsorption on silica surfaces (0.4% monolayer NPs). Because the AMPS groups interacted weakly with Ca(2+), they were sufficiently well solvated to provide steric stabilization. The PAA groups, in contrast, enabled covalent grafting of the poly(AMPS-co-AA) chains to amine-functionalized IO NPs via formation of amide bonds and prevented polymer desorption even after a 40,000-fold dilution. The aforementioned methodology may be readily adapted to stabilize a variety of other functional inorganic and organic NPs at high salinities and temperatures.


Langmuir | 2014

Synergistic formation and stabilization of oil-in-water emulsions by a weakly interacting mixture of zwitterionic surfactant and silica nanoparticles.

Andrew J. Worthen; Lynn M. Foster; Jiannan Dong; Jonathan A. Bollinger; Adam H. Peterman; Lucinda E. Pastora; Steven L. Bryant; Thomas M. Truskett; Christopher W. Bielawski; Keith P. Johnston

Oil-in-water emulsions were formed and stabilized at low amphiphile concentrations by combining hydrophilic nanoparticles (NPs) (i.e., bare colloidal silica) with a weakly interacting zwitterionic surfactant, caprylamidopropyl betaine, to generate a high hydrophilic-lipophilic balance. The weak interaction of the NPs with surfactant was quantified with contact angle measurements. Emulsions were characterized by static light scattering to determine the droplet size distributions, optical photography to quantify phase separation due to creaming, and both optical and electron microscopy to determine emulsion microstructure. The NPs and surfactant acted synergistically to produce finer emulsions with a greater stability to coalescence relative to the behavior with either NPs or surfactant alone. As a consequence of the weak adsorption of the highly hydrophilic surfactant on the anionic NPs along with the high critical micelle concentration, an unusually large surfactant concentration was available to adsorb at the oil-water interface and lower the interfacial tension. The synergy for emulsion formation and stabilization for the two amphiphiles was even greater in the case of a high-salinity synthetic seawater aqueous phase. Here, higher NP adsorption at the oil-water interface was caused by electrostatic screening of interactions between (1) NPs and the anionic oil-water interface and (2) between the NPs. This greater adsorption as well as partial flocculation of the NPs provided a more efficient barrier to droplet coalescence.


Spe Journal | 2014

Switchable Nonionic to Cationic Ethoxylated Amine Surfactants for CO2 Enhanced Oil Recovery in High-Temperature, High-Salinity Carbonate Reservoirs

Yunshen Chen; Amro S. Elhag; Benjamin M. Poon; Leyu Cui; Kun Ma; Sonia Y. Liao; Prathima P. Reddy; Andrew J. Worthen; George J. Hirasaki; Quoc P. Nguyen; Sibani Lisa Biswal; Keith P. Johnston

Yunshen Chen, SPE, Amro S. Elhag, and Benjamin M. Poon, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Texas at Austin; Leyu Cui, and Kun Ma, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Rice University; Sonia Y. Liao, Prathima P. Reddy and Andrew J. Worthen, SPE, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Texas at Austin; George J. Hirasaki, SPE, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Rice University; Quoc P. Nguyen, SPE, Department of Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering, University of Texas at Austin; Sibani L. Biswal, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Rice University; and Keith P. Johnston, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Texas at Austin


Langmuir | 2013

Stabilization of Iron Oxide Nanoparticles in High Sodium and Calcium Brine at High Temperatures with Adsorbed Sulfonated Copolymers

Hitesh G. Bagaria; Ki Youl Yoon; Bethany M. Neilson; Victoria Cheng; Jae Ho Lee; Andrew J. Worthen; Zheng Xue; Chun Huh; Steven L. Bryant; Christopher W. Bielawski; Keith P. Johnston

A series of sulfonated random and block copolymers were adsorbed on the surface of ~100 nm iron oxide (IO) nanoparticles (NPs) to provide colloidal stability in extremely concentrated brine composed of 8% wt NaCl + 2% wt CaCl2 (API brine; 1.4 M NaCl + 0.2 M CaCl2) at 90 °C. A combinatorial materials chemistry approach, which employed Ca(2+)-mediated adsorption of anionic acrylic acid-containing sulfonated polymers to preformed citrate-stabilized IO nanoclusters, enabled the investigation of a large number of polymer coatings. Initially a series of poly(2-methyl-2-acrylamidopropanesulfonate-co-acrylic acid) (poly(AMPS-co-AA)) (1:8 to 1:1 mol:mol), poly(styrenesulfonate-block-acrylic acid) (2.4:1 mol:mol), and poly(styrenesulfonate-alt-maleic acid) (3:1 mol:mol) copolymers were screened for solubility in API brine at 90 °C. The ratio of AMPS to AA groups was varied to balance the requirement of colloid dispersibility at high salinity (provided by AMPS) against the need for anchoring of the polymers to the iron oxide surface (via the AA). Steric stabilization of IO NPs coated with poly(AMPS-co-AA) (1:1 mol:mol) provided colloidal stability in API brine at room temperature and 90 °C for up to 1 month. The particles were characterized before and after coating at ambient and elevated temperatures by a variety of techniques including colloidal stability experiments, dynamic light scattering, zeta potential, and thermogravimetric analysis.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Modified Montmorillonite Clay Microparticles for Stable Oil-in-Seawater Emulsions

Jiannan Dong; Andrew J. Worthen; Lynn M. Foster; Yunshen Chen; Kevin A. Cornell; Steven L. Bryant; Thomas M. Truskett; Christopher W. Bielawski; Keith P. Johnston

Environmentally benign clay particles are of great interest for the stabilization of Pickering emulsions. Dodecane-in-synthetic seawater (SSW) emulsions formed with montmorillonite (MMT) clay microparticles modified with bis(2-hydroxyethyl)oleylamine were stable against coalescence, even at clay concentrations down to 0.1% w/v. Remarkably, as little as 0.001% w/v surfactant lowered the hydrophilicity of the clay to a sufficient level for stabilization of oil-in-SSW emulsions. The favorable effect of SSW on droplet size reduction and emulsion stability enhancement is hypothesized to be due to reduced electrostatic repulsion between adsorbed clay particles and a consequent increase in the continuous phase (an aqueous clay suspension) viscosity. Water/oil (W/O) emulsions were inverted to O/W either by decreasing the mass ratio of surfactant-to-clay (transitional inversion) or by increasing the water volume fraction (catastrophic inversion). For both types of emulsions, coalescence was minimal and the sedimentation or creaming was highly correlated with the droplet size. For catastrophic inversions, the droplet size of the emulsions was smaller in the case of the preferred curvature. Suspensions of concentrated clay in oil dispersions in the presence of surfactant were stable against settling. The mass transfer pathways during emulsification of oil containing the clay particles were analyzed on the droplet size/stability phase diagrams to provide insight for the design of dispersant systems for remediating surface and subsurface oceanic oil spills.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2016

Phase behavior and interfacial properties of a switchable ethoxylated amine surfactant at high temperature and effects on CO2-in-water foams

Yunshen Chen; Amro S. Elhag; Prathima P. Reddy; Hao Chen; Leyu Cui; Andrew J. Worthen; Kun Ma; Heriberto Quintanilla; Jose A. Noguera; George J. Hirasaki; Quoc P. Nguyen; Sibani Lisa Biswal; Keith P. Johnston

The interfacial properties for surfactants at the supercritical CO2-water (C-W) interface at temperatures above 80°C have very rarely been reported given limitations in surfactant solubility and chemical stability. These limitations, along with the weak solvent strength of CO2, make it challenging to design surfactants that adsorb at the C-W interface, despite the interest in CO2-in-water (C/W) foams (also referred to as macroemulsions). Herein, we examine the thermodynamic, interfacial and rheological properties of the surfactant C12-14N(EO)2 in systems containing brine and/or supercritical CO2 at elevated temperatures and pressures. Because the surfactant is switchable from the nonionic state to the protonated cationic state as the pH is lowered over a wide range in temperature, it is readily soluble in brine in the cationic state below pH 5.5, even up to 120°C, and also in supercritical CO2 in the nonionic state. As a consequence of the affinity for both phases, the surfactant adsorption at the CO2-water interface was high, with an area of 207Å(2)/molecule. Remarkably, the surfactant lowered the interfacial tension (IFT) down to ∼5mN/m at 120°C and 3400 psia (23MPa), despite the low CO2 density of 0.48g/ml, indicating sufficient solvation of the surfactant tails. The phase behavior and interfacial properties of the surfactant in the cationic form were favorable for the formation and stabilization of bulk C/W foam at high temperature and high salinity. Additionally, in a 1.2 Darcy glass bead pack at 120°C, a very high foam apparent viscosity of 146 cP was observed at low interstitial velocities given the low degree of shear thinning. For a calcium carbonate pack, C/W foam was formed upon addition of Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) in the feed brine to keep the pH below 4, by the common ion effect, in order to sufficiently protonate the surfactant. The ability to form C/W foams at high temperatures is of interest for a variety of applications in chemical synthesis, separations, materials science, and subsurface energy production.


Transport in Porous Media | 2017

Foam Generation Hysteresis in Porous Media: Experiments and New Insights

Mohammad Lotfollahi; Ijung Kim; Mohammad R. Beygi; Andrew J. Worthen; Chun Huh; Keith P. Johnston; Mary F. Wheeler; David A. DiCarlo

Foam application in subsurface processes including environmental remediation, geological carbon-sequestration, and gas-injection enhanced oil recovery (EOR) has the potential to enhance contamination remediation, secure


IOR 2017 - 19th European Symposium on Improved Oil Recovery | 2017

Nanoparticle-stabilized Emulsions for Improved Mobility Control for Adverse-mobility Waterflooding

Ijung Kim; Andrew J. Worthen; Mohammad Lotfollahi; Keith P. Johnston; David A. DiCarlo; Chun Huh


Aiche Journal | 2013

Carbon dioxide‐in‐water foams stabilized with nanoparticles and surfactant acting in synergy

Andrew J. Worthen; Steven L. Bryant; Chun Huh; Keith P. Johnston

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Keith P. Johnston

University of Texas at Austin

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Chun Huh

University of Texas at Austin

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Yunshen Chen

University of Texas at Austin

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Amro S. Elhag

University of Texas at Austin

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David A. DiCarlo

University of Texas at Austin

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Ijung Kim

University of Texas at Austin

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Quoc P. Nguyen

University of Texas at Austin

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Zheng Xue

University of Texas at Austin

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