As a temperature-resistant and salt-resistant polymer, acrylamide and 2-acrylamide-2-methylpropane sulfonic acid (abbreviated as AM-AMPS) copolymer is currently widely used in drilling, water control and oil production stabilization, enhanced oil recovery and other fields, but its stability under high temperature has been less studied. The degradation process of the AM-AMPS copolymer solution was studied by measuring viscosity, the degree of hydrolysis, and weight-average molecular weight at different temperatures and aging time. During the high-temperature aging process, the viscosity of the AM-AMPS copolymer saline solution first increases and then decreases. The combined action of the hydrolysis reaction and the oxidative thermal degradation leads to the change of the viscosity of the AM-AMPS copolymer saline solution. The hydrolysis reaction of the AM-AMPS copolymer mainly affects the structural viscosity of its saline solution through intramolecular and intermolecular electrostatic interactions, while the oxidative thermal degradation mainly reduces its molecular weight by breaking the main chain of the copolymer molecules, reducing the viscosity of the AM-AMPS copolymer saline solution. The content of AM and AMPS groups in the AM-AMPS copolymer solution at various temperatures and aging time was analyzed using liquid nuclear magnetic resonance carbon spectroscopy, demonstrating that the hydrolysis reaction rate constant of AM groups was significantly higher than that of AMPS groups. The contribution values of hydrolysis reaction and oxidative thermal degradation of the AM-AMPS copolymer at different aging time to viscosity were quantitatively calculated at temperatures ranging from 104.5 °C to 140 °C. It was determined that the higher the heat treatment temperature, the smaller the contribution of hydrolysis reaction to viscosity, while the bigger the contribution of oxidative thermal degradation to the viscosity of the AM-AMPS copolymer solution.
CITATION STYLE
Zhang, G., Ran, Y., Jiang, P., & Pei, H. (2023). A Study on the Thermal Degradation of an Acrylamide and 2-Acrylamido-2-Methylpropanesulfonic Acid Copolymer at High Temperatures. Polymers, 15(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/polym15122665
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