1989
DOI: 10.1021/ef00016a004
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Improved methods for the selective isolation of the sulfide and thiophenic classes of compounds from petroleum

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Cited by 54 publications
(48 citation statements)
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References 4 publications
(7 reference statements)
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“…Conversely, the thiophenes undergo photoinduced polymerization and thus contain up to 45 carbons (e.g., O 14 S 1 ) and can therefore incorporate more oxygen atoms (up to 17). It is important to note that previous studies have indicated that sulfides readily oxidize to sulfoxides (but not sulfones) upon thermal and chemical oxidation, whereas thiophenes do not oxidize. ,, However, we do not observe this trend for the heavy distillate cut and hypothesize that photooxidation versus other forms of oxidation involve different reaction pathways and thus produce different oxidized products. Moreover, the presence of aromatics in the thiophene fractions promotes photooxidation from sunlight because they are known to act as chromophores.…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 85%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Conversely, the thiophenes undergo photoinduced polymerization and thus contain up to 45 carbons (e.g., O 14 S 1 ) and can therefore incorporate more oxygen atoms (up to 17). It is important to note that previous studies have indicated that sulfides readily oxidize to sulfoxides (but not sulfones) upon thermal and chemical oxidation, whereas thiophenes do not oxidize. ,, However, we do not observe this trend for the heavy distillate cut and hypothesize that photooxidation versus other forms of oxidation involve different reaction pathways and thus produce different oxidized products. Moreover, the presence of aromatics in the thiophene fractions promotes photooxidation from sunlight because they are known to act as chromophores.…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 85%
“…Thiophenic species are the most abundant type of sulfur in petroleum and have been shown to be nonreactive/noncorrosive in refinery operations; they are extremely stable structures, which persist throughout geologic time and survive thermal/catalytic refinery processes. , Conversely, sulfides/disulfides comprise a smaller mass fraction of sulfur-containing species in crude oil, but are much more reactive and corrosive than their thiophenic counterparts. , Moreover, sulfoxides have been detected in crude oils by positive-ion (+) electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (ESI FT-ICR MS), but were shown to comprise a very small percent of the total sulfur in petroleum . Sulfur content and functionality are especially of interest to refinery/production strategies because governmental regulations limit their concentrations in commercial products to protect the environment and public health, and there are many methods to isolate sulfur species from petroleum. In line with these concerns, sulfur chemistry is crucial for understanding the formation of water-soluble species through photooxidation of oil spills (fate), as well as environmental consequences (impact). Correspondingly, a study involving photoirradiation of various benzothiophene model compounds along with a high-sulfur crude oil demonstrated that water-soluble sulfur-containing acidic species are produced from photooxidation .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is consistent with some of previous studies. 20 Even though S 1 class species had higher content than S 2 class species before HDT, the S 2 class species were more active. Figure 4 shows the S 1 class composition of SFEF subfractions and their corresponding HDT products.…”
Section: ■ Results and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…carried out quantitative analysis of sulfides from different crude oils by the approach of oxidation–reduction coupled with chromatography. Nevertheless, it was pointed out that the reaction extents of different sulfides were unequal during the oxidation–reduction process, and some sulfides cannot be reduced as a result of excessive oxidation . Methylation–demethylation is another approach for obtaining high-purity sulfides and showed no discrimination on different sulfides, which enabled more detailed molecular composition analysis of sulfides. However, the separation process is complex and needs a very long time, which takes at least 1 week to ensure sufficient conversion of the sulfides.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%