01500nam0 22003251i 450 UON0004043820231205102143.71720020107f1838 |0itac50 baengGB|||| 1||||Syria, the Holy land, Asia minor, &c. illustrated in a series of views drawn from natureby W.H. Bartlett, William Purser, Thomas Allomwith descriptions of the plates by John CarneLondonFisher & Son[1838]3 v. rilegati in 1 in gran parte illustrati27 cLa data di pubblicazione รจ ricavata dalla prefazione del v. 3VIAGGI E VIAGGIATORISIRIA E PALESTINASEC. XIXUONC013652FIVIAGGI E VIAGGIATORIASIA MINORESEC. XIXUONC013653FIGBLondonUONL003044VO VIII BVICINO ORIENTE - VIAGGIAALLOMThomasUONV002992BARTLETTW. H.UONV025563CARNEJohnUONV025565PURSERWilliamUONV025564Fisher and SonUONV252412650ITSOL20240220RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSIUON00040438SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI RARI VO VIII B 010 SI MR 8919 7 010 Syria, the Holy land, Asia minor, &c. illustrated in a series of views drawn from nature1154888UNIOR04073nam 22010333a 450 991034684300332120250203235429.09783039211074303921107210.3390/books978-3-03921-107-4(CKB)4920000000095210(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/43521(ScCtBLL)9d1878ff-eba6-496e-afb1-b796bb6241b7(OCoLC)1118514805(oapen)doab43521(EXLCZ)99492000000009521020250203i20192019 uu engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierColloids and Interfaces in Oil RecoverySpencer TaylorMDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute2019Basel, Switzerland :MDPI,2019.1 electronic resource (234 p.)9783039211067 3039211064 It is well-known that colloid and interface science and petroleum production are inextricably linked. Whether in the reservoir, with its porous structure, or during recovery, crude oil is intimately associated with rock surfaces and with water, often in the form of emulsions. This situation leads to highly complex systems, comprising multiple colloids and interfaces, which require to be optimized if oil is to be recovered efficiently, both in terms of economic cost and with due concern for the environment. This book contains a compilation of contemporary research topics which illustrate various aspects of the importance of colloids and interfaces in crude oil recovery through modifying conditions between the rock, crude oil, and water in the reservoir, in order to achieve improved oil recovery. The specific topics covered relate both to conventional oils, in which waterflooding is the most common secondary and tertiary means of recovery, and to non-conventional heavy oil and natural bitumen, which require thermal recovery methods, owing to their high viscosity.multicomponent ion exchangealcoholspolymer-enhanced foamlow salinity waterfloodingheavy oilcyclodextrinsSAGDnanoparticle fluidsCO2 foamin-situ rheologysurfactantsPickering emulsionsenhanced oil recoveryemulsionsinclusion complexespetroleumBacillus haloduransnon-Newtonian flow in porous mediumoil recoveryBacillus firmusoil film displacementsurface and interfacial tensionnaphthenic acidMicrobial Enhanced Oil Recoveryrecovery factorthermal recoveryheavy oil and bitumenSAGcolloid and interfacial sciencemetal ion interactionsporous mediaoptical video microscopymicrofluidicsspore forming bacteriainterfacial complexationelectric double layerdynamic interfacial tensionpolymer floodingwettabilitypolymersfluid-fluid interactionsinterfaceswaterfloodingoil sandsEORcontact angleswettability alterationbiotransformationmonolayerasphaltenepetroleum colloidssurface chargeheavy oil recoveryTaylor Spencer1318751ScCtBLLScCtBLLBOOK9910346843003321Colloids and Interfaces in Oil Recovery3033518UNINA