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Dive into the research topics where Soheil Saraji is active.

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Featured researches published by Soheil Saraji.


Langmuir | 2013

Wettability of Supercritical Carbon Dioxide/Water/Quartz Systems: Simultaneous Measurement of Contact Angle and Interfacial Tension at Reservoir Conditions

Soheil Saraji; Lamia Goual; Mohammad Piri; Henry Plancher

Injection of carbon dioxide in deep saline aquifers is considered as a method of carbon sequestration. The efficiency of this process is dependent on the fluid-fluid and rock-fluid interactions inside the porous media. For instance, the final storage capacity and total amount of capillary-trapped CO2 inside an aquifer are affected by the interfacial tension between the fluids and the contact angle between the fluids and the rock mineral surface. A thorough study of these parameters and their variations with temperature and pressure will provide a better understanding of the carbon sequestration process and thus improve predictions of the sequestration efficiency. In this study, the controversial concept of wettability alteration of quartz surfaces in the presence of supercritical carbon dioxide (sc-CO2) was investigated. A novel apparatus for measuring interfacial tension and contact angle at high temperatures and pressures based on Axisymmetric Drop Shape Analysis with no-Apex (ADSA-NA) method was developed and validated with a simple system. Densities, interfacial tensions, and dynamic contact angles of CO2/water/quartz systems were determined for a wide range of pressures and temperatures relevant to geological sequestration of CO2 in the subcritical and supercritical states. Image analysis was performed with ADSA-NA method that allows the determination of both interfacial tensions and contact angles with high accuracy. The results show that supercritical CO2 alters the wettability of quartz surface toward less water-wet conditions compared to subcritical CO2. Also we observed an increase in the water advancing contact angles with increasing temperature indicating less water-wet quartz surfaces at higher temperatures.


Langmuir | 2018

Capillary Condensation of Binary and Ternary Mixtures of n-Pentane–Isopentane–CO2 in Nanopores: An Experimental Study on the Effects of Composition and Equilibrium

Elizabeth Barsotti; Soheil Saraji; Sugata P. Tan; Mohammad Piri

Confinement in nanopores can significantly impact the chemical and physical behavior of fluids. While some quantitative understanding is available for how pure fluids behave in nanopores, there is little such insight for mixtures. This study aims to shed light on how nanoporosity impacts the phase behavior and composition of confined mixtures through comparison of the effects of static and dynamic equilibrium on experimentally measured isotherms and chromatographic analysis of the experimental fluids. To this end, a novel gravimetric apparatus is introduced and validated. Unlike apparatuses that have been previously used to study the confinement-induced phase behavior of fluids, this apparatus employs a gravimetric technique capable of discerning phase transitions in a wide variety of nanoporous media under both static and dynamic conditions. The apparatus was successfully validated against data in the literature for pure carbon dioxide and n-pentane. Then, isotherms were generated for binary mixtures of carbon dioxide and n-pentane using static and flow-through methods. Finally, two ternary mixtures of carbon dioxide, n-pentane, and isopentane were measured using the static method. While the equilibrium time was found important for determination of confined phase transitions, flow rate in the dynamic method was not found to affect the confined phase behavior. For all measurements, the results indicate qualitative transferability of the bulk phase behavior to the confined fluid.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2018

A new insight into the dependence of relaxation time on frequency in viscoelastic surfactant solutions: From experimental to modeling study

Brayan F. García; Soheil Saraji

HYPOTHESIS The relaxation time in viscoelastic surfactant solutions is a function of temperature, salt/surfactant concentrations, resting conditions, as well as shear frequency. The simplistic assumption of a single and constant relaxation time is not representative of all relaxation modes in these solutions especially at high frequencies. EXPERIMENTS Steady-state and oscillatory measurements are carried out to study the effects of high temperature, concentration and resting condition on the rheology of surfactants/salt mixtures including a non-ionic and a zwitterionic/anionic surfactant system. Furthermore, a novel semi-empirical rheological model is deducted based on Cates theory.This model introduces, for the first time, a frequency-dependence for the continuous relaxation time spectrum. FINDINGS At high temperatures, the non-ionic surfactant become more viscoelastic and the zwitterionic/anionic system loses its viscoelasticity. The addition of surfactant/salt improves the viscoelasticity of both systems, and, for the zwitterionic/anionic mixture, increasing the resting temperature improves its viscoelasticity. In addition, the proposed model significantly improves predictions of traditional Maxwell model for different viscoelastic surfactant solutions (using data from this study and the literature) for a considerable range of surfactant and salt combinations at a wide range of temperature.


International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control | 2014

The effects of SO2 contamination, brine salinity, pressure, and temperature on dynamic contact angles and interfacial tension of supercritical CO2/brine/quartz systems

Soheil Saraji; Mohammad Piri; Lamia Goual


International Journal of Coal Geology | 2015

The representative sample size in shale oil rocks and nano-scale characterization of transport properties

Soheil Saraji; Mohammad Piri


Energy & Fuels | 2010

Adsorption of Asphaltenes in Porous Media under Flow Conditions

Soheil Saraji; Lamia Goual; Mohammad Piri


Fuel | 2015

Dynamic interfacial tension and wettability of shale in the presence of surfactants at reservoir conditions

Vahideh Mirchi; Soheil Saraji; Lamia Goual; Mohammad Piri


Fuel | 2016

A review on capillary condensation in nanoporous media: Implications for hydrocarbon recovery from tight reservoirs

Elizabeth Barsotti; Sugata P. Tan; Soheil Saraji; Mohammad Piri; Jin-Hong Chen


Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects | 2013

Dynamic adsorption of asphaltenes on quartz and calcite packs in the presence of brine films

Soheil Saraji; Lamia Goual; Mohammad Piri


SPE Improved Oil Recovery Symposium | 2014

Dynamic Interfacial Tensions and Contact Angles of Surfactant-in-Brine/Oil/Shale Systems: Implications to Enhanced Oil Recovery in Shale Oil Reservoirs

Vahideh Mirchi; Soheil Saraji; Lamia Goual; Mohammad Piri

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