Overview
Paraffin and wax deposition can restrict flow, increase pressure drop, and drive costly pigging or remediation programs. Wax inhibitors are used to modify crystal growth so deposited solids are less likely to adhere and accumulate on metal surfaces.
In practice, treatment strategy depends on crude composition, wax appearance temperature, thermal profile, shear conditions, and residence time. The right chemistry helps operators maintain stable throughput while reducing intervention frequency.
Selection note: Wax control programs work best when chemical selection is supported by crude characterization and operating-temperature review, not by generic treat-rate assumptions.
Typical Applications
- Production tubing and gathering lines handling waxy crude
- Flowlines and export pipelines exposed to cooling during transport
- Restart scenarios where temperature loss increases deposition risk
- Facilities looking to reduce mechanical cleaning frequency
Operational Considerations
- Crude-specific testing is important because wax behavior varies widely by field and blend composition.
- Injection point, mixing quality, and dosage control strongly influence field performance.
- Wax inhibition is often paired with pigging, thermal management, or periodic solvent cleaning.