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Keywords = gel-based drilling fluid

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28 pages, 8828 KB  
Article
Oil-Water Biphasic Metal-Organic Supramolecular Gel for Lost Circulation Control: Formulation Optimization, Gelation Mechanism, and Plugging Performance
by Qingwang Li, Songlei Li, Ye Zhang, Chaogang Chen, Xiaochuan Wu, Menglai Li, Shubiao Pan and Junfei Peng
Gels 2026, 12(1), 74; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels12010074 - 15 Jan 2026
Abstract
Lost circulation in oil-based drilling fluids (OBDFs) remains difficult to mitigate because particulate lost circulation materials depend on bridging/packing and gel systems for aqueous media often lack OBDF compatibility and controllable in situ sealing. A dual-precursor oil–water biphasic metal–organic supramolecular gel enables rapid [...] Read more.
Lost circulation in oil-based drilling fluids (OBDFs) remains difficult to mitigate because particulate lost circulation materials depend on bridging/packing and gel systems for aqueous media often lack OBDF compatibility and controllable in situ sealing. A dual-precursor oil–water biphasic metal–organic supramolecular gel enables rapid in situ sealing in OBDF loss zones. The optimized formulation uses an oil-phase to aqueous gelling-solution volume ratio of 10:3, with 2.0 wt% Span 85, 12.5 wt% TXP-4, and 5.0 wt% NaAlO2. Apparent-viscosity measurements and ATR–FTIR analysis were used to evaluate the effects of temperature, time, pH, and shear on MOSG gelation. Furthermore, the structural characteristics and performances of MOSGs were systematically investigated by combining microstructural characterization, thermogravimetric analysis, rheological tests, simulated fracture-plugging experiments, and anti-shear evaluations. The results indicate that elevated temperatures (30–70 °C) and mildly alkaline conditions in the aqueous gelling solution (pH ≈ 8.10–8.30) promote P–O–Al coordination and strengthen hydrogen bonding, thereby facilitating the formation of a three-dimensional network. In contrast, strong shear disrupts the nascent network and delays gelation. The optimized MOSGs rapidly exhibit pronounced viscoelasticity and thermal resistance (~193 °C); under high shear (380 rpm), the viscosity retention exceeds 60% and the viscosity recovery exceeds 70%. In plugging tests, MOSG forms a dense sealing layer, achieving a pressure-bearing gradient of 2.27 MPa/m in simulated permeable formations and markedly improving the fracture pressure-bearing capacity in simulated fractured formations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advanced Technology for Oil and Nature Gas Exploration)
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16 pages, 2862 KB  
Article
Preparation and Performance Evaluation of a Novel Biodegradable Fuzzy-Ball Drilling Fluid for Coal Seam
by Yuanbo Chen, Lihui Zheng, Runtian Luo, Qin Guo, Junqi Zhao and Yufei Zhang
Processes 2026, 14(1), 104; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14010104 - 28 Dec 2025
Viewed by 190
Abstract
In order to address the challenges of soft coal texture, poor permeability, and wellbore instability in tectonic coal reservoirs, a new biodegradable fuzzy-ball drilling fluid combined with a bio-based surfactant and enzyme system was developed. The optimal formula was determined through single-factor experiments [...] Read more.
In order to address the challenges of soft coal texture, poor permeability, and wellbore instability in tectonic coal reservoirs, a new biodegradable fuzzy-ball drilling fluid combined with a bio-based surfactant and enzyme system was developed. The optimal formula was determined through single-factor experiments and orthogonal optimization: 6% KCl–2% trehalose composite base slurry + 4% carboxymethyl chitosan + 0.4% hydroxypropyl methylcellulose + 0.15% xanthan gum + 0.12% guar gum + 0.3% cocamidopropyl betaine + 0.15% lauryl alcohol + 0.2% triethanolamine, with the degrading agent consisting of 0.2% composite-modified amylase + 0.04% composite-modified cellulase. The performance evaluation results show that the drilling fluid has stable rheological properties in the temperature range of 40~60 °C (yield point-plastic viscosity ratio: 0.8~0.9) and low filtration loss (5.8~6.5 mL); it exhibits excellent inhibition on tectonic coal, the inhibition rate of linear expansion rate is 72.1%, and the 14-mesh rolling recovery rate is 82.5%; at 55 °C, the gel breaking rate reaches 96.9% after 1.5 h, the mud cake removal rate reaches 98.8%, and the permeability recovery rate reaches 84.8%. After applying this drilling fluid, the unconfined compressive strength of tectonic coal increases from 1.2 MPa to 2.8 MPa (an increase of 133.3%), and the triaxial compressive strength increases from 20.1 MPa to 38.5 MPa (an increase of 91.5%); the numerical simulation shows that the radial displacement around the wellbore decreases by 62.1% and the plastic zone area shrinks by 73.2%. This novel biodegradable fuzzy-ball drilling fluid has the characteristics of efficient wellbore stabilization, easy degradation, and low formation damage, providing effective technical support for the green development of coalbed methane in tectonic coal reservoirs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy Systems)
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16 pages, 1848 KB  
Article
Rheological Investigation of Water-Based Drilling Fluids Using Synthesized ZnO with TiO2 and Activated Carbon
by Chunping Liu, Tingting Wang, Zeeshan Ali Lashari and Wanchun Zhao
Processes 2026, 14(1), 81; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14010081 - 25 Dec 2025
Viewed by 354
Abstract
The primary goal of this study was to improve the rheological properties of water-based drilling mud using a combination of TiO2-coated ZnO nanoparticles and activated carbon (AC) from banana peels. The TiO2/ZnO nanocomposites were prepared using polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) [...] Read more.
The primary goal of this study was to improve the rheological properties of water-based drilling mud using a combination of TiO2-coated ZnO nanoparticles and activated carbon (AC) from banana peels. The TiO2/ZnO nanocomposites were prepared using polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) as a binder under magnetic stirring and ultrasonic sonication to ensure uniform coating, followed by washing and controlled thermal treatment. NaOH-assisted chemical activation of banana peel produced activated carbon with better porosity and surface functionality than raw banana peel. The base water-based mud used in this study had different concentrations of both additives mixed in, and rheological parameters such as mud density, plastic viscosity (PV), yield point (YP), and gel strength were measured according to standard API methods. X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) were used for structural and morphological characterization, which proved the successful coating and uniform dispersion of TiO2 on ZnO nanoparticles. The use of mixed additives resulted in a significant improvement in mud properties, such as viscosity, gel strength, and yield point, proving to be more effective in suspension capacity and overall rheological stability. The use of this hybrid bio-nanocomposite mud system is a very economical and eco-friendly way of enhancing the drilling fluid performance, thus proving to be a supporting factor in conducting drilling operations that are both safe and efficient. Additionally, this study provides a sustainable hybrid TiO2-ZnO and activated carbon additive that results in synergistic improvement of drilling-mud rheology and stability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Polymer Gels for Oil Drilling and Enhanced Recovery)
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25 pages, 4815 KB  
Article
Performance Evaluation of an Activated Greek Palygorskite in High-Salinity and High-Hardness Water-Based Drilling Fluids
by Dimitrios Papadimitriou, Ernestos Nikolas Sarris and Nikolaos Kantiranis
Minerals 2025, 15(12), 1309; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15121309 - 15 Dec 2025
Viewed by 217
Abstract
The performance of conventional bentonite-based drilling fluids is severely compromised in high-salinity and high-hardness brines, creating a need for salt-tolerant viscosifiers. This work provides a comprehensive performance evaluation of an activated palygorskite sourced from the Ventzia basin in Greece to be used as [...] Read more.
The performance of conventional bentonite-based drilling fluids is severely compromised in high-salinity and high-hardness brines, creating a need for salt-tolerant viscosifiers. This work provides a comprehensive performance evaluation of an activated palygorskite sourced from the Ventzia basin in Greece to be used as a high-performance additive for water-based drilling fluids. Six raw clay samples were mechanically processed and activated via extrusion and chemically treated with 2.25% MgO. Their rheological behavior and filtration properties were systematically investigated in three aqueous environments, (i) deionized water, (ii) API-standard salt water, and (iii) API-standard high-hardness salt water. The performance was benchmarked against that of commercial palygorskite products. The results demonstrated that the selected activated Greek samples exhibited excellent rheological properties, including higher viscosity, yield point, and thixotropic gel strength, comparable to those of the commercial benchmark. While the fluid’s rheology was suppressed by increasing salinity due to the flocculation of co-existing smectite, the best-performing Greek clays maintained a significant advantage, developing exceptionally robust gel structures critical for solid suspension in harsh conditions. Crucially, the same smectite flocculation mechanism proved highly beneficial for filtration control, leading to a significant reduction in fluid loss and the formation of a thin filter cake, particularly with the high-hardness brine. The findings confirm that activated Greek palygorskite is a technically viable, high-performance alternative to imported commercial materials, offering a sustainable solution for formulating resilient drilling fluids for challenging environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Alkali Activation of Clay-Based Materials)
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17 pages, 3786 KB  
Article
Enhancing Gel-Based Drilling FIuids for Oil Sands Recovery Using Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Quantum Dots as AsphaItene Dispersants
by Weichao Du, Xueqi Feng, Yi Zhang, Wei Wang, Wenjun Shan, Le Xue and Gang Chen
Gels 2025, 11(12), 942; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11120942 - 24 Nov 2025
Viewed by 390
Abstract
Oil sands drilling frequently contaminates water-based xanthan gels with highly viscous asphaltenes, collapsing their three-dimensional network and causing barite sag, high fluid loss and poor cuttings transport. Nitrogen-functionalized carbon quantum dots (N-CQDs) were hydrothermally synthesised from citric acid and 1-hexadecylamine and characterised by [...] Read more.
Oil sands drilling frequently contaminates water-based xanthan gels with highly viscous asphaltenes, collapsing their three-dimensional network and causing barite sag, high fluid loss and poor cuttings transport. Nitrogen-functionalized carbon quantum dots (N-CQDs) were hydrothermally synthesised from citric acid and 1-hexadecylamine and characterised by means of FT-IR, TEM and TGA. The concentration-dependent influence of N-CQDs (0–1.2 wt%) on gel viscoelasticity, microstructure and filtration properties was evaluated through rheometry, API and fluid-loss tests. At 0.01 wt% N-CQDs, the viscosity of the adsorbed oil phase dropped by 50% and the mean droplet diameter decreased from 247.7 µm to <100 µm. Consequently, the xanthan gel exhibited a significant enhancement in its mechanical strength and fluid loss performance. Wax-crystal growth was simultaneously inhibited, lowering the pour point by 6 °C. N-CQDs act as nanospacers that disrupt π-stacking of asphaltenes and hydrogen-bond to the polymer backbone, thereby restoring gel strength and sealing capacity. The work provides a sustainable, low-toxicity route to rejuvenate gel-based drilling fluids contaminated by heavy oil and facilitates their reuse in oil sands reservoirs. Full article
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23 pages, 3792 KB  
Article
Optimization of the Synthesis of Low Viscosity and High Shear Sulfonated Guar Gum for Enhancing Its Performance in Drilling Fluids
by Yifei Zhao, Yansong Pan, Le Xue, Yongfei Li, Weichao Du and Gang Chen
Gels 2025, 11(12), 939; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11120939 - 22 Nov 2025
Viewed by 580
Abstract
Guar gum (GG) is a classic polysaccharide gel former in drilling fluids, but its native network is hindered by high water-insoluble residue, modest yield-point (YP) build-up and poor tolerance to temperature ≥ 120 °C and salinity ≥ 12 wt% NaCl. Here we transformed [...] Read more.
Guar gum (GG) is a classic polysaccharide gel former in drilling fluids, but its native network is hindered by high water-insoluble residue, modest yield-point (YP) build-up and poor tolerance to temperature ≥ 120 °C and salinity ≥ 12 wt% NaCl. Here we transformed GG into a sulfonated guar gum (SGG) hydrogel via alkaline etherification with sodium 3-chloro-2-hydroxy-propane sulfonate. FTIR, EA and TGA corroborate the grafting of –SO3 groups (DS = 0.18), while rheometry shows that a 0.3 wt% SGG aqueous gel exhibits 34% higher YP/PV ratio and stronger shear-thinning than native GG, indicating a denser yet still reversible three-dimensional network. In 4 wt% Ca-bentonite mud the SGG gel film reduces API fluid loss by 12% and maintains YP/PV = 0.33 after hot-rolling at 120 °C, a retention 4.7-fold that of GG; likewise, in 12 wt% NaCl brine the gel still affords YP/PV = 0.44, evidencing electrostatically reinforced hydration layers that resist ionic compression. Linear-swell tests reveal shale inhibition improved by 14%. The introduced –SO3 functions strengthen inter-chain repulsion and water binding, yielding a thermally robust, salt-tolerant polysaccharide gel network. As a green, high-performance gel additive, SGG offers a promising route for next-generation water-based drilling fluids subjected to high temperature and high salinity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Polymer Gels for Oil Drilling and Enhanced Recovery)
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17 pages, 5070 KB  
Article
Enhancing Rheology and Wettability of Drilling Fluids at Ultra-Low Temperatures Using a Novel Amide Material
by Ning Huang, Jinsheng Sun, Jingping Liu, Kaihe Lv, Xuefei Deng, Taifeng Zhang, Yuanwei Sun, Han Yan and Delin Hou
Gels 2025, 11(9), 687; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11090687 - 28 Aug 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 893
Abstract
The ice sheet and subglacial geological environment in Antarctica have become the focus of scientific exploration. The development of Antarctic drilling technology will serve as a crucial safeguard for scientific exploration. However, the extremely ultra-low temperatures and intricate geological conditions present substantial obstacles [...] Read more.
The ice sheet and subglacial geological environment in Antarctica have become the focus of scientific exploration. The development of Antarctic drilling technology will serve as a crucial safeguard for scientific exploration. However, the extremely ultra-low temperatures and intricate geological conditions present substantial obstacles for drilling operations in Antarctica, and the existing drilling fluid technology cannot satisfy the requirements of efficient and safe drilling. To ameliorate the wettability and rheology of ultra-low-temperature drilling fluids, a new amide material (HAS) was prepared using dodecylamine polyoxyethylene ether, azelaic acid, and N-ethylethylenediamine as raw materials. Experiments using infrared spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic hydrogen spectroscopy, and contact angle indicated that the target product was successfully synthesized. Performance evaluation showed that 2% HAS could achieve a yield point of 2.5 Pa for drilling fluid at −55 °C, and it also gave the fluid superior shear-thinning characteristics and a large thixotropic loop area. This indicated that HAS significantly enhanced the rheological properties of the drilling fluid, ensuring that it can carry cuttings and ice debris. In addition, 2% HAS could also increase the colloidal rate from 8% to more than 76% at −55 °C in different base oils. Meanwhile, the colloid rate was maintained above 92.4% when the density was 0.92~0.95 g/cm3. Mechanism studies showed that HAS increased the zeta potential and decreased the particle size of organoclay. At the same time, it changed the organoclay state from a clustered state to a uniformly dispersed state, and the particle size decreased. It was found that HAS formed a weak gel grid structure through interactions between polar groups, such as amide and imino groups with organoclays particles, thus improving the rheology and wettability of drilling fluid. In addition, HAS is an environmentally friendly high-performance material. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gel Applications)
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17 pages, 2566 KB  
Article
Synergistic Epichlorohydrin-Crosslinked Carboxymethyl Xylan for Enhanced Thermal Stability and Filtration Control in Water-Based Drilling Fluids
by Yutong Li, Fan Zhang, Bo Wang, Jiaming Liu, Yu Wang, Zhengli Shi, Leyao Du, Kaiwen Wang, Wangyuan Zhang, Zonglun Wang and Liangbin Dou
Gels 2025, 11(8), 666; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11080666 - 20 Aug 2025
Viewed by 853
Abstract
Polymers derived from renewable polysaccharides offer promising avenues for the development of high-temperature, environmentally friendly drilling fluids. However, their industrial application remains limited by inadequate thermal stability and poor colloidal compatibility in complex mud systems. In this study, we report the rational design [...] Read more.
Polymers derived from renewable polysaccharides offer promising avenues for the development of high-temperature, environmentally friendly drilling fluids. However, their industrial application remains limited by inadequate thermal stability and poor colloidal compatibility in complex mud systems. In this study, we report the rational design and synthesis of epichlorohydrin-crosslinked carboxymethyl xylan (ECX), developed through a synergistic strategy combining covalent crosslinking with hydrophilic functionalization. When incorporated into water-based drilling fluid base slurries, ECX facilitates the formation of a robust gel suspension. Comprehensive structural analyses (FT-IR, XRD, TGA/DSC) reveal that dual carboxymethylation and ether crosslinking impart a 10 °C increase in glass transition temperature and a 15% boost in crystallinity, forming a rigid–flexible three-dimensional network. ECX-modified drilling fluids demonstrate excellent colloidal stability, as evidenced by an enhancement in zeta potential from −25 mV to −52 mV, which significantly improves dispersion and interparticle electrostatic repulsion. In practical formulation (1.0 wt%), ECX achieves a 620% rise in yield point and a 71.6% reduction in fluid loss at room temperature, maintaining 70% of rheological performance and 57.5% of filtration control following dynamic aging at 150 °C. Tribological tests show friction reduction up to 68.2%, efficiently retained after thermal treatment. SEM analysis further confirms the formation of dense and uniform polymer–clay composite filter cakes, elucidating the mechanism behind its high-temperature resilience and effective sealing performance. Furthermore, ECX demonstrates high biodegradability (BOD5/COD = 21.3%) and low aquatic toxicity (EC50 = 14 mg/L), aligning with sustainable development goals. This work elucidates the correlation between molecular engineering, gel microstructure, and macroscopic function, underscoring the great potential of eco-friendly polysaccharide-based crosslinked polymers for industrial gel-based fluid design in harsh environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gel Chemistry and Physics)
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11 pages, 3042 KB  
Article
Phase-Conversion Stiffened Dual-Network Hydrogel for Fracture Plugging in Oil-Based Drilling Fluid
by Xinying Cui, Chengwen Wang, Weian Huang, Shifeng Zhang, Haiqun Chen and Bo Wu
Gels 2025, 11(8), 635; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11080635 - 12 Aug 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 690
Abstract
During drilling operations, lost circulation frequently occurs, leading to significant loss of drilling fluids which causes environmental damage and increasing drilling costs. To address the problem of fracture plugging, gel materials have emerged as an ideal solution due to stable physicochemical properties and [...] Read more.
During drilling operations, lost circulation frequently occurs, leading to significant loss of drilling fluids which causes environmental damage and increasing drilling costs. To address the problem of fracture plugging, gel materials have emerged as an ideal solution due to stable physicochemical properties and excellent environmental compatibility. However, most existing gels exhibit poor stability and low mechanical strength under high-temperature conditions. To overcome these limitations, high-temperature-resistant phase-conversion stiffened dual-network hydrogel for oil-based drilling fluids was developed. Phase-conversion was realized by immersing synthesized double-network hydrogel in ethylene glycol (EG), polyethylene glycol (PEG), and glycerol (Gly), optimizing and enhancing its mechanical properties, followed by plugging performance evaluations. Experimental results demonstrated that the phase-conversion stiffened gels achieved significantly improved compressive strength and plugging efficiency at elevated temperature. The GC-MS results indicated that dehydration and reagent exchange occurred during immersion, with change in the solid content of the sample. After being treated by white oil at high temperature, the oil phase almost replaced the water phase in the gel. The results of ATR-IR confirmed the formation of hydrogen bonds in the gel. TGA data revealed that PEG enhanced the thermal stability of the gel, EG negatively affected thermal stability, and Gly had negligible influence. The enhancement in gel strength primarily stems from the increase in solid content caused by phase transformation. Dehydration and multiple hydrogen bonds formed between organic reagent molecules and polymer chains in the gel have a synergistic enhancement effect. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gel Applications)
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20 pages, 11924 KB  
Article
Mechanisms of Covalent Bonds in Enhancing the Adsorption Stability of Clay–Polymer Gels in High-Temperature Environments
by Yu Wang, Fan Zhang, Liangbin Dou, Yutong Li, Kaiwen Wang, Zhengli Shi, Leyao Du, Wangyuan Zhang and Zonglun Wang
Gels 2025, 11(8), 623; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11080623 - 9 Aug 2025
Viewed by 625
Abstract
To address the issue of drilling fluid performance drop and wellbore instability induced by desorption between treatment agents and clay in the high-temperature environment of ultra-deep drilling, this study synthesized three organosilicon polymers (ADE, ADM, ADD) with different substituents. The study confirmed that [...] Read more.
To address the issue of drilling fluid performance drop and wellbore instability induced by desorption between treatment agents and clay in the high-temperature environment of ultra-deep drilling, this study synthesized three organosilicon polymers (ADE, ADM, ADD) with different substituents. The study confirmed that the covalent bond significantly improved the high-temperature adsorption resistance of clay, which is closely related to the interface behavior of gels. Through rolling recovery, rheology, and filtration experiments for performance evaluation, these organic silicon polymers showed excellent high-temperature performance: the shale rolling recovery rate exceeded 80% at 210 °C, and the filtration loss was reduced to 14 mL, with a reduction rate of 53.3%. The adsorption capacity of the three polymers on clay remained unchanged from 150 °C to 210 °C, among which the adsorption amount of trimethoxy groups stabilized at 8–11 mg/g after 150 °C. The adsorption capacity of ethoxy groups increased by 7.9% at 150–210 °C. The adsorption capacity of dimethoxy groups with methyl steric hindrance increased by 28.1% at 150–210 °C. These results indicate that covalent bonds effectively enhance the high-temperature adsorption of clay, allowing for polymer molecules to firmly anchor on the clay surface at high temperatures. This breakthrough overcomes the limitations of traditional inhibitors in high-temperature desorption, and provides a valuable reference for the preparation of high-temperature adsorption resistant functional materials in water-based drilling fluid gel systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gel Chemistry and Physics)
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18 pages, 4456 KB  
Article
Study on the Filling and Plugging Mechanism of Oil-Soluble Resin Particles on Channeling Cracks Based on Rapid Filtration Mechanism
by Bangyan Xiao, Jianxin Liu, Feng Xu, Liqin Fu, Xuehao Li, Xianhao Yi, Chunyu Gao and Kefan Qian
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2383; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082383 - 27 Jul 2025
Viewed by 851
Abstract
Channeling in cementing causes interlayer interference, severely restricting oilfield recovery. Existing channeling plugging agents, such as cement and gels, often lead to reservoir damage or insufficient strength. Oil-soluble resin (OSR) particles show great potential in selective plugging of channeling fractures due to their [...] Read more.
Channeling in cementing causes interlayer interference, severely restricting oilfield recovery. Existing channeling plugging agents, such as cement and gels, often lead to reservoir damage or insufficient strength. Oil-soluble resin (OSR) particles show great potential in selective plugging of channeling fractures due to their excellent oil solubility, temperature/salt resistance, and high strength. However, their application is limited by the efficient filling and retention in deep fractures. This study innovatively combines the OSR particle plugging system with the mature rapid filtration loss plugging mechanism in drilling, systematically exploring the influence of particle size and sorting on their filtration, packing behavior, and plugging performance in channeling fractures. Through API filtration tests, visual fracture models, and high-temperature/high-pressure (100 °C, salinity 3.0 × 105 mg/L) core flow experiments, it was found that well-sorted large particles preferentially bridge in fractures to form a high-porosity filter cake, enabling rapid water filtration from the resin plugging agent. This promotes efficient accumulation of OSR particles to form a long filter cake slug with a water content <20% while minimizing the invasion of fine particles into matrix pores. The slug thermally coalesces and solidifies into an integral body at reservoir temperature, achieving a plugging strength of 5–6 MPa for fractures. In contrast, poorly sorted particles or undersized particles form filter cakes with low porosity, resulting in slow water filtration, high water content (>50%) in the filter cake, insufficient fracture filling, and significantly reduced plugging strength (<1 MPa). Finally, a double-slug strategy is adopted: small-sized OSR for temporary plugging of the oil layer injection face combined with well-sorted large-sized OSR for main plugging of channeling fractures. This strategy achieves fluid diversion under low injection pressure (0.9 MPa), effectively protects reservoir permeability (recovery rate > 95% after backflow), and establishes high-strength selective plugging. This study clarifies the core role of particle size and sorting in regulating the OSR plugging effect based on rapid filtration loss, providing key insights for developing low-damage, high-performance channeling plugging agents and scientific gradation of particle-based plugging agents. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Chemical Processes and Systems)
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14 pages, 4097 KB  
Article
Preparation and Performance Evaluation of Graphene Oxide-Based Self-Healing Gel for Lost Circulation Control
by Wenzhe Li, Pingya Luo and Xudong Wang
Polymers 2025, 17(15), 1999; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17151999 - 22 Jul 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 802
Abstract
Lost circulation is a major challenge in oil and gas drilling operations, severely restricting drilling efficiency and compromising operational safety. Conventional bridging and plugging materials rely on precise particle-to-fracture size matching, resulting in low success rates. Self-healing gels penetrate loss zones as discrete [...] Read more.
Lost circulation is a major challenge in oil and gas drilling operations, severely restricting drilling efficiency and compromising operational safety. Conventional bridging and plugging materials rely on precise particle-to-fracture size matching, resulting in low success rates. Self-healing gels penetrate loss zones as discrete particles that progressively swell, accumulate, and self-repair in integrated gel masses to effectively seal fracture networks. Self-healing gels effectively overcome the shortcomings of traditional bridging agents including poor adaptability to fractures, uncontrollable gel formation of conventional downhole crosslinking gels, and the low strength of conventional pre-crosslinked gels. This work employs stearyl methacrylate (SMA) as a hydrophobic monomer, acrylamide (AM) and acrylic acid (AA) as hydrophilic monomers, and graphene oxide (GO) as an inorganic dopant to develop a GO-based self-healing organic–inorganic hybrid plugging material (SG gel). The results demonstrate that the incorporation of GO significantly enhances the material’s mechanical and rheological properties, with the SG-1.5 gel exhibiting a rheological strength of 3750 Pa and a tensile fracture stress of 27.1 kPa. GO enhances the crosslinking density of the gel network through physical crosslinking interactions, thereby improving thermal stability and reducing the swelling ratio of the gel. Under conditions of 120 °C and 6 MPa, SG-1.5 gel demonstrated a fluid loss volume of only 34.6 mL in 60–80-mesh sand bed tests. This gel achieves self-healing within fractures through dynamic hydrophobic associations and GO-enabled physical crosslinking interactions, forming a compact plugging layer. It provides an efficient solution for lost circulation control in drilling fluids. Full article
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21 pages, 1252 KB  
Article
Research and Performance Evaluation of Low-Damage Plugging and Anti-Collapse Water-Based Drilling Fluid Gel System Suitable for Coalbed Methane Drilling
by Jian Li, Zhanglong Tan, Qian Jing, Wenbo Mei, Wenjie Shen, Lei Feng, Tengfei Dong and Zhaobing Hao
Gels 2025, 11(7), 473; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11070473 - 20 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 932
Abstract
Coalbed methane (CBM), a significant unconventional natural gas resource, holds a crucial position in China’s ongoing energy structure transformation. However, the inherent low permeability, high brittleness, and strong sensitivity of CBM reservoirs to drilling fluids often lead to severe formation damage during drilling [...] Read more.
Coalbed methane (CBM), a significant unconventional natural gas resource, holds a crucial position in China’s ongoing energy structure transformation. However, the inherent low permeability, high brittleness, and strong sensitivity of CBM reservoirs to drilling fluids often lead to severe formation damage during drilling operations, consequently impairing well productivity. To address these challenges, this study developed a novel low-damage, plugging, and anti-collapse water-based drilling fluid gel system (ACWD) specifically designed for coalbed methane drilling. Laboratory investigations demonstrate that the ACWD system exhibits superior overall performance. It exhibits stable rheological properties, with an initial API filtrate loss of 1.0 mL and a high-temperature, high-pressure (HTHP) filtrate loss of 4.4 mL after 16 h of hot rolling at 120 °C. It also demonstrates excellent static settling stability. The system effectively inhibits the hydration and swelling of clay and coal, significantly reducing the linear expansion of bentonite from 5.42 mm (in deionized water) to 1.05 mm, and achieving high shale rolling recovery rates (both exceeding 80%). Crucially, the ACWD system exhibits exceptional plugging performance, completely sealing simulated 400 µm fractures with zero filtrate loss at 5 MPa pressure. It also significantly reduces core damage, with an LS-C1 core damage rate of 7.73%, substantially lower than the 19.85% recorded for the control polymer system (LS-C2 core). Field application in the JX-1 well of the Ordos Basin further validated the system’s effectiveness in mitigating fluid loss, preventing wellbore instability, and enhancing drilling efficiency in complex coal formations. This study offers a promising, relatively environmentally friendly, and cost-effective drilling fluid solution for the safe and efficient development of coalbed methane resources. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Chemical and Gels for Oil Drilling and Enhanced Recovery)
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18 pages, 3205 KB  
Article
Influences of Reservoir Conditions on the Performance of Cellulose Nanofiber/Laponite-Reinforced Supramolecular Polymer Gel-Based Lost Circulation Materials
by Liyao Dai, Jinsheng Sun, Kaihe Lv, Yingrui Bai, Jianlong Wang, Chaozheng Liu and Mei-Chun Li
Gels 2025, 11(7), 472; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11070472 - 20 Jun 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 911
Abstract
Lost circulation during drilling has significantly hindered the safe and efficient development of oil and gas resources. Supramolecular polymer gel–based lost circulation materials have shown significant potential for application due to their unique molecular structures and superior performance. Herein, a high–performance supramolecular polymer [...] Read more.
Lost circulation during drilling has significantly hindered the safe and efficient development of oil and gas resources. Supramolecular polymer gel–based lost circulation materials have shown significant potential for application due to their unique molecular structures and superior performance. Herein, a high–performance supramolecular polymer gel was developed, and the influence of reservoir conditions on the performance of the supramolecular polymer gel was investigated in detail. The results identified an optimal formulation for the preparation of supramolecular polymer gel comprising 15 wt% acrylamide, 3 wt% 2-acrylamide-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid, 2.6 wt% divinylbenzene, 5 wt% polyvinyl alcohol, 0.30 wt% cellulose nanofibers, and 3 wt% laponite. The performance of the gel-forming suspension and the resulting supramolecular polymer gel was influenced by various factors, including temperature, density, pH, and the intrusion of drilling fluid, saltwater, and crude oil. Nevertheless, the supramolecular polymer gels consistently exhibited high strength under diverse environmental conditions, as confirmed by rheological measurements. Moreover, the gels exhibited strong plugging performance across various fracture widths and in permeable formations, with maximum breakthrough pressures exceeding 6 MPa. These findings establish a theoretical foundation and practical approach for the field application of supramolecular polymer gels in complex geological formations, demonstrating their effectiveness in controlling lost circulation under challenging downhole conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gels for Oil and Gas Industry Applications (3rd Edition))
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16 pages, 2498 KB  
Article
Synthesis, Characteristics, and Field Applications of High-Temperature and Salt-Resistant Polymer Gel Tackifier
by Guowei Zhou, Xin Zhang, Weijun Yan and Zhengsong Qiu
Gels 2025, 11(6), 378; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11060378 - 22 May 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1031
Abstract
To address the technical challenge of high polymer gel viscosity reducers losing viscosity at elevated temperatures and difficulty in controlling fluid loss, a polymer-based nano calcium carbonate composite high-temperature tackifier named GW-VIS was prepared using acrylamide (AM), 2-acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid (AMPS), N-vinylpyrrolidone (NVP), and [...] Read more.
To address the technical challenge of high polymer gel viscosity reducers losing viscosity at elevated temperatures and difficulty in controlling fluid loss, a polymer-based nano calcium carbonate composite high-temperature tackifier named GW-VIS was prepared using acrylamide (AM), 2-acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid (AMPS), N-vinylpyrrolidone (NVP), and nano calcium carbonate as raw materials through water suspension polymerization. This polymer gel can absorb water well at room temperature and has a small solubility. After a long period of high-temperature treatment, most of it can dissolve in water, increasing the viscosity of the suspension. The structure of the samples was characterized by infrared spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis, and scanning electron microscopy, and their performance was evaluated. Rheological tests indicated that the 0.5% water suspension had a consistency coefficient (k = 761) significantly higher than the requirement for clay-free drilling fluids (k > 200). In thermal resistance experiments, the material maintained stable viscosity at 180 °C (reduction rate of 0%), and only decreased by 14.8% at 200 °C. Salt tolerance tests found that the viscosity reduction after hot rolling at 200 °C was only 17.31% when the NaCl concentration reached saturation. Field trials in three wells in the Liaohe oilfield verified that the clay-free drilling fluid supported formation operations successfully. The study shows that the polymer gel has the potential to maintain rheological stability at high temperatures by forming a network structure through polymer chain adsorption and entanglement, with a maximum temperature resistance of up to 200 °C, providing an efficient drilling fluid for deep oil and gas well development. It is feasible to select nano calcium carbonate to participate in the research of high-temperature resistant polymer materials. Meanwhile, the combined effect of monomers with large steric hindrance and inorganic materials can enhance the product’s temperature resistance and resistance to NaCl pollution. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gels for Oil and Gas Industry Applications (3rd Edition))
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