Mark Sueyoshi
Shimizu Corporation
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Featured researches published by Mark Sueyoshi.
Energy Sources Part A-recovery Utilization and Environmental Effects | 2009
Rashid S. Al-Maamari; Akihiko Hirayama; Mark Sueyoshi; Osman Abdalla; Ali S. Al-Bemani; M. R. Islam
Abstract The present study addresses the efficiency of an integrated air sparging, soil vapor extraction, and pump and treat system in the remediation of a diesel contaminated site in Oman. Cleanup efforts have targeted groundwater and soil in fractured formations. Site hydrogeological characterization was conducted including sampling and analysis of water and soil. Within seven months of the start of the treatment system, benzene gas in the unsaturated zone fell from an initial range of 15–60 ppm to below detection level, while total petroleum hydrocarbon in the groundwater dropped from 25–50 ppm to less than 0.5 ppm. Treatment processes have ceased while groundwater and soil are being monitored. Thus far, benzene gas has been undetected for the past 18 months, but total petroleum hydrocarbon in groundwater has rebounded to 1.2 ppm during the last four months.
Oil and gas facilities | 2014
Rashid S. Al-Maamari; Mark Sueyoshi; Masaharu Tasaki; Keisuke Kojima; Kazuo Okamura
Summary Polymer-enhanced-oil-recovery (EOR) operation has been implemented for the production of oil from difficult mature oil fields in Oman. The polymer used to sweep oil toward production wells in this EOR technique is resulting in the generation of polymer-flood produced water (PFPW) of increasing viscosity. Current methods of treating oilfield produced water must be reconsidered for the effective treatment of PFPW of such changing quality. In a previous study, the use of polyaluminum chloride (PAC) was proposed for the coagulation of oil in produced water to be separated by flotation and filtration. As such, laboratory tests were conducted to evaluate the applicability of PAC and other chemicals for treatment of PFPW with higher viscosity than ordinary oilfield-produced water. These tests indicated clearly that aluminum sulfate (AS) was more effective for treatment of such higherviscosity water. A pilot plant developed during the earlier study was used to conduct coagulation/flocculation-, flotation-, filtration-, and adsorption-treatment trials for PFPW from an oil field at which polymer EOR was under way. For the final trial, the inlet PFPW viscosity was 1.4 cp at 40°C and oil concentration was greater than 200 mg/L. AS was applied for the coagulation/flocculation and flotation stages, and was found to be effective in reducing oil concentration to 1 mg/L. Filtration and adsorption stages resulted in further improvement of water quality. Most of the polymer used for EOR was believed to have been removed along with oil and suspended solids.
Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference 2012 - Sustainable Energy Growth: People, Responsibility, and Innovation, ADIPEC 2012 | 2012
Rashid S. Al-Maamari; Mark Sueyoshi; Masaharu Tasaki; Kazuo Okamura; Yasmeen Mohammed Al Lawati; Randa Zaki Nabulsi; Mundhir Battashi
Summary As an oil field matures, it produces larger quantities of produced water. Appropriate treatment levels and technologies depend on a number of factors, such as disposal methods or usage aims, environmental impacts, and economics. In this study, a pilot plant with a capacity of 50 m3/d was used to conduct flotation, filtration, and adsorption trials for producedwater treatment at a crude-oil gathering facility. The flexible design of the plant allows for the testing of different combinations of these processes on the basis of the requirements of the water to be treated. The subject water during this study was a complex and changing mixture of brine and oil from different oil fields. Induced-gas-flotation (IGF) trials were conducted, with different coagulant [polyaluminum chloride (PAC)] -addition rates from 0 to 820 mg⋅L–1. Inlet-dispersed oil-in-water (OIW) concentrations were quite varied during the trials, ranging from 39 to 279 mg⋅L–1 (fluorescence-analysis method). Turbidity also varied, ranging from 85 to 279 FTU. Through coagulation/flocculation and flotation, dispersed oils were removed from the water. PAC addition ranging from 60 to 185 mg⋅L–1 resulted in the reduction of the dispersed-oil concentration to less than 50 mg⋅L–1 in treated water; and PAC addition ranging from 101 to 200 mg⋅L–1 resulted in the reduction of the dispersed-oil concentration to less than 15 mg⋅L–1 in treated water. Turbidity was also reduced through flotation, with trial average reductions ranging from 57 to 78%. Filtration further reduced turbidity at rates greater than 80% through the removal of any suspended solids remaining from flotation. Activated-carbon adsorption reduced OIW concentrations of flotation-/filtrationtreated water to 5 mg⋅L–1 (infrared-analysis method) through the removal of dissolved oil remaining in the water. Results confirmed that such adsorption treatment would be more practical for water with lower chemical-oxygen-demand (COD) concentration because high-COD concentrations in water reduce the lifetime of activated carbon dramatically.
Energy & Fuels | 2007
Naoya Shigemoto; Rashid S. Al-Maamari; Baba Y. Jibril; and Akihiko Hirayama; Mark Sueyoshi
Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis | 2012
Mark Sueyoshi; Rashid S. Al-Maamari; Baba Y. Jibril; Masaharu Tasaki; Kazuo Okamura; Hitoshi Kuwagaki; Hidenori Yahiro; Kunimasa Sagata; Yu Han
Environmental Earth Sciences | 2011
Rashid S. Al-Maamari; Akihiko Hirayama; Tsuyoshi Shiga; Mark Sueyoshi; Mahfoodh Al-Shuely; Osman Abdalla; A. R. Kacimov
Oil and gas facilities | 2014
Rashid S. Al-Maamari; Mark Sueyoshi; Masaharu Tasaki; Kazuo Okamura; Yasmeen Al-Lawati; Randa Zaki Nabulsi; Mundhir Al-Battashi
Journal of Chemical Engineering of Japan | 2007
Rashid S. Al-Maamari; Naoya Shigemoto; Akihiko Hirayama; Mark Sueyoshi
Proceedings of the 2002 SPE International Petroleum Conference and Exhibition in Mexico | 2002
Akihiko Hirayama; Masaki Maegaito; Masato Kawaguchi; Akira Ishikawa; Mark Sueyoshi; Ali S. Al-Bemani; Ahmed Mushtaque; Humphrey A. Esechie; Salim Ali Al-Mazrui; Mansour Al-Haddabi; Sulaiman Said Al-Khanjari
Journal of Japan Society of Civil Engineers | 2017
Keisuke Kojima; Kazuo Okamura; Masaharu Tasaki; Mark Sueyoshi; Rashid S. Al-Maamari