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Keywords = water-based drilling fluids gel system

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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 595
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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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 452
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 709
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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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 730
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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17 pages, 3962 KB  
Article
Preparation and Performance Evaluation of High-Temperature Polymer Nano-Plugging Agents for Water-Based Drilling Fluids Systems Applicable to Unconventional Reservoirs
by Lei Yao, Xiaohu Quan, Yongjie Zhang, Shengming Huang, Qi Feng and Xin Zhang
Polymers 2025, 17(5), 588; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17050588 - 23 Feb 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1313
Abstract
To address the challenges of micro-fracture development in shale formations, frequent wellbore instability, and the limited plugging capability of water-based drilling fluids in unconventional reservoirs, a nano-plugging agent (NPA) was synthesized using emulsion polymerization. The synthesized NPA was characterized through thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) [...] Read more.
To address the challenges of micro-fracture development in shale formations, frequent wellbore instability, and the limited plugging capability of water-based drilling fluids in unconventional reservoirs, a nano-plugging agent (NPA) was synthesized using emulsion polymerization. The synthesized NPA was characterized through thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), revealing excellent high-temperature stability and a spherical or sub-spherical morphology, with particle diameters ranging from approximately 20 to 50 nm. The rheological, filtration, and plugging properties of NPA were systematically evaluated, and its sealing mechanism was analyzed. The results demonstrate that at a test temperature of 180 °C, the optimal NPA concentration in the drilling fluid base slurry is 1.5%, achieving a 60.5% reduction in HTHP (high-temperature high-pressure) sand disc filtration loss. Additionally, the API filtration loss and HTHP filtration loss reduction rates reached 58.1% and 50.3%, respectively, highlighting the remarkable filtration loss reduction and plugging efficiency of NPA under high-temperature conditions. After NPA treatment, the specific surface area and pore volume of shale cuttings decreased to 9.348 m2/g and 0.035 cm3/g, respectively, indicating effective surface plugging. The mechanism analysis suggests that due to its nanoscale size, NPA can penetrate deep into micro-pores and fractures within the shale, achieving deep-layer plugging. Furthermore, NPA forms a physical plugging barrier on the shale surface, effectively suppressing shale hydration and swelling. This study provides valuable insights and guidance for addressing wellbore instability and the insufficient plugging performance of drilling fluids in unconventional reservoir drilling operations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Enhanced Oil Recovery Technologies, 3rd Edition)
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21 pages, 1873 KB  
Article
Study on the Improvement of Temperature Resistance of Starch Drilling Fluid Treatment Agent by Composite Plant Phenols
by Huaizhu Liu, Kangning Zhao, Qingchen Wang, Huafeng Ni, Fan Zhang, Le Xue, Quande Wang and Gang Chen
Processes 2025, 13(3), 622; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13030622 - 22 Feb 2025
Viewed by 1630
Abstract
Modified starch and other natural polymer materials have found extensive applications in drilling fluids. However, conventional modification methods offer limited scope for further enhancing their temperature resistance, typically with the applicable temperature being below 140 °C. This paper presents the preparation of composite [...] Read more.
Modified starch and other natural polymer materials have found extensive applications in drilling fluids. However, conventional modification methods offer limited scope for further enhancing their temperature resistance, typically with the applicable temperature being below 140 °C. This paper presents the preparation of composite plant phenols using walnut shells, peanut shells, straw, and lignin, which are rich in the fundamental “three elements” of plants. To explore the improvement of the temperature resistance of cellulose-based drilling fluid additives, this study investigated the apparent viscosity, dynamic shear force, filtration performance, and adhesion coefficient of water-based drilling fluids supplemented with composite plant phenols. Additionally, the mechanism of action of the composite in drilling fluids was analyzed via infrared spectroscopy. The results revealed that the combined use of starch and composite plant phenols elevated the temperature resistance limit of starch from 160 °C to 180 °C. After aging at 180 °C, the filtration loss of the drilling fluid formulation containing composite plant phenols dropped to 3.6 mL, while the apparent viscosity climbed from 3.1 mPa·s to 13.6 mPa·s. This clearly demonstrates the excellent high-temperature resistance and filtration-reducing capabilities of composite plant phenols. When the addition of cassava starch was 2%, the filtration loss of the drilling fluid system reached a minimum of 6.2 mL. A positively charged gel was identified as the optimal high-temperature-resistant cutting agent. At a dosage of 1%, the dynamic plastic ratio of the formulation increased from 0.51 to 2.11. Tannin extract emerged as the ideal high-temperature-resistant and environmentally friendly drilling fluid treatment agent. After its addition, the apparent viscosity of the drilling fluid system increased from 2.4 mPa·s to 7.3 mPa·s, and the filtration loss decreased from 140 mL to 14.6 mL. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental and Green Processes)
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17 pages, 7665 KB  
Article
Synthesis and Performance Evaluation of High-Temperature-Resistant Extreme-Pressure Lubricants for a Water-Based Drilling Fluid Gel System
by Shengming Huang, Tengfei Dong, Guancheng Jiang, Jun Yang, Xukun Yang and Quande Wang
Gels 2024, 10(8), 505; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels10080505 - 1 Aug 2024
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2758
Abstract
Addressing the high friction and torque challenges encountered in drilling processes for high-displacement wells, horizontal wells, and directional wells, we successfully synthesized OAG, a high-temperature and high-salinity drilling fluid lubricant, using materials such as oleic acid and glycerol. OAG was characterized through Fourier-transform [...] Read more.
Addressing the high friction and torque challenges encountered in drilling processes for high-displacement wells, horizontal wells, and directional wells, we successfully synthesized OAG, a high-temperature and high-salinity drilling fluid lubricant, using materials such as oleic acid and glycerol. OAG was characterized through Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA). The research findings demonstrate the excellent lubricating performance of OAG under high-temperature and high-salinity conditions. After adding 1.0% OAG to a 4% freshwater-based slurry, the adhesion coefficient of the mud cake decreased to 0.0437, and at a dosage of 1.5%, the lubrication coefficient was 0.032, resulting in a reduction rate of 94.1% in the lubrication coefficient. After heating at 200 °C for 16 h, the reduction rate of the lubrication coefficient reached 93.6%. Even under 35% NaCl conditions, the reduction rate of the lubrication coefficient remained at 80.3%, indicating excellent lubrication retention performance. The lubricant OAG exhibits good compatibility with high-density drilling fluid gel systems, maintaining their rheological properties after heating at 200 °C and reducing filtration loss. The lubrication mechanism analysis indicates that OAG can effectively adsorb onto the surface of N80 steel sheets. The contact angle of the steel sheets increased from 41.9° to 83.3° before and after hot rolling, indicating a significant enhancement in hydrophobicity. This enhancement is primarily attributed to the formation of an extreme-pressure lubricating film through chemical reactions of OAG on the metal surface. Consequently, this film markedly reduces the friction between the drilling tools and the wellbore rocks, thereby enhancing lubrication performance and providing valuable guidance for constructing high-density water-based drilling fluid gel systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Chemical and Gels for Oil Drilling and Enhanced Recovery)
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15 pages, 6110 KB  
Article
Preparation and Performance Evaluation of Ionic Liquid Copolymer Shale Inhibitor for Drilling Fluid Gel System
by Zhiwen Dai, Jinsheng Sun, Zhuoyang Xiu, Xianbin Huang, Kaihe Lv, Jingping Liu, Yuanwei Sun and Xiaodong Dong
Gels 2024, 10(2), 96; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels10020096 - 26 Jan 2024
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2209
Abstract
An inhibitor that can effectively inhibit shale hydration is necessary for the safe and efficient development of shale gas. In this study, a novel ionic liquid copolymer shale inhibitor (PIL) was prepared by polymerizing the ionic liquid monomers 1-vinyl-3-aminopropylimidazolium bromide, acrylamide, and methacryloyloxyethyl [...] Read more.
An inhibitor that can effectively inhibit shale hydration is necessary for the safe and efficient development of shale gas. In this study, a novel ionic liquid copolymer shale inhibitor (PIL) was prepared by polymerizing the ionic liquid monomers 1-vinyl-3-aminopropylimidazolium bromide, acrylamide, and methacryloyloxyethyl trimethyl ammonium chloride. The chemical structure was characterized using fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and hydrogen-nuclear magnetic resonance (H-NMR), and the inhibition performance was evaluated using the inhibition of slurrying test, bentonite flocculation test, linear expansion test, and rolling recovery test. The experimental results showed that bentonite had a linear expansion of 27.9% in 1 wt% PIL solution, 18% lower than that in the polyether amine inhibitor. The recovery rate of shale in 1 wt% PIL was 87.4%. The ionic liquid copolymer could work synergistically with the filtrate reducer, reducing filtration loss to 7.2 mL with the addition of 1%. Mechanism analysis showed that PIL adsorbed negatively charged clay particles through cationic groups, which reduced the electrostatic repulsion between particles. Thus, the stability of the bentonite gel systems was destroyed, and the hydration dispersion and expansion of bentonite were inhibited. PIL formed a hydrophobic film on the surface of clay and prevented water from entering into the interlayer of clay. In addition, PIL lowered the surface tension of water, which prevented the water from intruding into the rock under the action of capillary force. These are also the reasons for the superior suppression performance of PIL. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gels for Oil Drilling and Enhanced Recovery (2nd Edition))
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22 pages, 8010 KB  
Article
Alkaline Hydrolysis of Waste Acrylic Fibers Using the Micro-Water Method and Its Application in Drilling Fluid Gel Systems
by Wenjun Long, Zhongjin Wei, Fengshan Zhou, Shaohua Li, Kang Yin, Yu Zhao, Siting Yu and Hang Qi
Gels 2023, 9(12), 974; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels9120974 - 13 Dec 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2865
Abstract
Filtrate reducer is a drilling fluid additive that can effectively control the filtration loss of drilling fluid to ensure the safe and efficient exploitation of oilfields. It is the most widely used treatment agent in oilfields. Due to its moderate conditions and controllable [...] Read more.
Filtrate reducer is a drilling fluid additive that can effectively control the filtration loss of drilling fluid to ensure the safe and efficient exploitation of oilfields. It is the most widely used treatment agent in oilfields. Due to its moderate conditions and controllable procedure, alkaline hydrolysis of high-purity waste polyacrylonitrile has been utilized for decades to produce filtrate reducer on a large scale in oilfields. However, the issues of long hydrolysis time, high viscosity of semi-finished products, high drying cost, and tail gas pollution have constrained the development of the industry. In this study, low-purity waste acrylic fiber was first separated and purified using high-temperature hydroplastization, and the hydrolyzed product was obtained using alkaline hydrolysis with the micro-water method, which was called MW−HPAN. The hydrolysis reaction was characterized using X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, infrared spectroscopy, and thermogravimetric analysis, and the elemental analysis showed a hydrolysis degree of 73.21%. The experimental results showed that after aging at 180 °C for 16 h, the filtration volume of the freshwater base slurry with 0.30% dosage and 4% brine base slurry with 1.20% dosage was 12.7 mL and 18.5 mL, respectively. The microstructure and particle size analysis of the drilling fluid gel system showed that MW−HPAN could prevent the agglomeration of clay and maintain a reasonable particle size distribution even under the combined deteriorating effect of high temperature and inorganic cations, thus forming a dense filter cake and achieving a low filtrate volume of the drilling fluid gel system. Compared with similar commercially available products, MW−HPAN has better resistance to temperature and salt in drilling fluid gel systems, and the novel preparation method is promising to be extended to practical production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gels for Oil and Gas Industry Applications (2nd Edition))
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19 pages, 5261 KB  
Article
An Amphiphilic Multiblock Polymer as a High-Temperature Gelling Agent for Oil-Based Drilling Fluids and Its Mechanism of Action
by Yinbo He, Mingliang Du, Jing He, Haiyang Liu, Yanhua Lv, Lei Guo, Peng Zhang and Yunhai Bai
Gels 2023, 9(12), 966; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels9120966 - 9 Dec 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2581
Abstract
Oil-based drilling fluids are widely used in challenging wells such as those with large displacements, deepwater and ultra-deepwater wells, deep wells, and ultra-deep wells due to their excellent temperature resistance, inhibition properties, and lubrication. However, there is a challenging issue of rheological deterioration [...] Read more.
Oil-based drilling fluids are widely used in challenging wells such as those with large displacements, deepwater and ultra-deepwater wells, deep wells, and ultra-deep wells due to their excellent temperature resistance, inhibition properties, and lubrication. However, there is a challenging issue of rheological deterioration of drilling fluids under high-temperature conditions. In this study, a dual-amphiphilic segmented high-temperature-resistant gelling agent (HTR-GA) was synthesized using poly fatty acids and polyether amines as raw materials. Experimental results showed that the initial decomposition temperature of HTR-GA was 374 °C, indicating good thermal stability. After adding HTR-GA, the emulsion coalescence voltage increased for emulsions with different oil-to-water ratios. HTR-GA could construct a weak gel structure in oil-based drilling fluids, significantly enhancing the shear-thinning and thixotropic properties of oil-based drilling fluids under high-temperature conditions. Using HTR-GA as the core, a set of oil-based drilling fluid systems with good rheological properties, a density of 2.2 g/cm3, and temperature resistance up to 220 °C were constructed. After aging for 24 h at 220 °C, the dynamic shear force exceeded 10 Pa, and G′ exceeded 7 Pa, while after aging for 96 h at 220 °C, the dynamic shear force exceeded 4 Pa, and G″ reached 7 Pa. The synthesized compound HTR-GA has been empirically validated to significantly augment the rheological properties of oil-based drilling fluids, particularly under high-temperature conditions, showcasing impressive thermal stability with a resistance threshold of up to 220 °C. This notable enhancement provides critical technical reinforcement for progressive exploration endeavors in deep and ultra-deep well formations, specifically employing oil-based drilling fluids. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gel for Oil-Based Drilling Fluid)
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14 pages, 3523 KB  
Article
Gel Stability of Calcium Bentonite Suspension in Brine and Its Application in Water-Based Drilling Fluids
by Zhenhua Zhao, Sinan Chen, Fengshan Zhou and Zhongjin Wei
Gels 2022, 8(10), 643; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels8100643 - 10 Oct 2022
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 3493
Abstract
With the development of the oil industry and the increasingly complex drilling environment, the performance of drilling fluids has to be constantly improved. In order to solve the problem of bentonite dispersion and hydration in a saline medium, a drilling fluid additive with [...] Read more.
With the development of the oil industry and the increasingly complex drilling environment, the performance of drilling fluids has to be constantly improved. In order to solve the problem of bentonite dispersion and hydration in a saline medium, a drilling fluid additive with good performance and acceptable cost was sought. The effects of several water-soluble polymers, such as cellulose polymers, synthetic polymers and natural polymers, on the rheology and gel suspension stability of calcium-based bentonite were compared in this study. Among the examined polymers, the xanthan gum biopolymer (XC) was the least negatively affected in the saline medium used. However, its high price limits its industrial application in oil and gas drilling fluids. In this study, a salt-tolerant polymer, modified vegetable gum (MVG), was prepared by a cross-linking modification of a natural plant gum, which is abundant and cheap. Then, a salt-tolerant polymer mixture called SNV was prepared, composed of the salt-resistant natural polymer MVG and the biopolymer XC. The salt tolerance and slurry ability of SNV and common water-soluble polymers were evaluated and compared. We then selected the most suitable Herschel–Bulkley model to fit the rheological curve of the SNV–bentonite aqueous suspension system. SNV improved the rheological properties of the calcium-based bentonite slurry and the dispersion stability of bentonite. In an SNV concentration of 0.35%, the apparent viscosity (AV) of the base slurry increased from 2 mPa·s to 32 mPa·s, and the low shear reading value at 3 rpm increased from 0 dia to 5 dia. This could greatly improve the viscosity and cutting carrying capacity of the bentonite drilling fluid. The bentonite drilling fluid prepared with SNV could be directly slurried with brine and even seawater; this means that when drilling in ocean, coastal saline water and high-salinity-surface saline water areas, the slurry preparation cost and preparation time can be conveniently reduced. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gels for Oil Drilling and Enhanced Recovery)
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21 pages, 4004 KB  
Article
Synthesis of a Low-Molecular-Weight Filtrate Reducer and Its Mechanism for Improving High Temperature Resistance of Water-Based Drilling Fluid Gel System
by Xiaodong Dong, Jinsheng Sun, Xianbin Huang, Jian Li, Kaihe Lv and Pengxin Zhang
Gels 2022, 8(10), 619; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels8100619 - 28 Sep 2022
Cited by 27 | Viewed by 3131
Abstract
During the exploitation of deep and ultradeep oil and gas resources, the high-temperature problem of deep reservoirs has become a major challenge for water-based drilling fluids. In this study, a novel high-temperature-resistant filtrate reducer (LDMS) with low molecular weight was synthesized using N, [...] Read more.
During the exploitation of deep and ultradeep oil and gas resources, the high-temperature problem of deep reservoirs has become a major challenge for water-based drilling fluids. In this study, a novel high-temperature-resistant filtrate reducer (LDMS) with low molecular weight was synthesized using N, N-dimethylacrylamide; sodium p-styrene sulfonate; and maleic anhydride, which can maintain the performance of a drilling fluid gel system under high temperature. Unlike the conventional high-temperature-resistant polymer filtrate reducer, LDMS does not significantly increase the viscosity and yield point of the drilling fluid gel systems. After aging at 210 °C, the filtrate volume of a drilling fluid with 2 wt% LDMS was only 8.0 mL. The mechanism of LDMS was studied by particle size distribution of a drilling fluid gel system, Zeta potential change, adsorption experiment, change of bentonite interlayer spacing, filter cake scanning electron microscope, and related theoretical analysis. The mechanism study revealed that LDMS could be adsorbed on the surface of bentonite particles in large quantities and intercalated into the interlayer of bentonite. Thus, it can improve the hydration degree of bentonite particles and the colloidal stability of the drilling fluid gel system, maintain the content of fine particles in the drilling fluid gel system, form a compact mud cake, and significantly reduce the filtrate volume of the drilling fluid gel system. Therefore, this work will promote the application of a low-molecular-weight polymer filtrate reducer in high-temperature-resistant water-based drilling fluid gel systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Gels for Oil Recovery)
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17 pages, 1449 KB  
Article
Modified Starch as a Filter Controller in Water-Based Drilling Fluids
by Diana Soto, Orietta León, José Urdaneta, Alexandra Muñoz-Bonilla and Marta Fernández-García
Materials 2020, 13(12), 2794; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13122794 - 20 Jun 2020
Cited by 32 | Viewed by 4482
Abstract
Herein, the effectiveness of an itaconic acid (IA) graft copolymer on native corn starch (NCS) as a filter control agent in fresh water-based drilling fluids (WBDFs) was evaluated. The copolymer (S-g-IA_APS) was synthesized by conventional radical dispersion polymerization using the redox [...] Read more.
Herein, the effectiveness of an itaconic acid (IA) graft copolymer on native corn starch (NCS) as a filter control agent in fresh water-based drilling fluids (WBDFs) was evaluated. The copolymer (S-g-IA_APS) was synthesized by conventional radical dispersion polymerization using the redox initiation system (NH4)2S2O8/NaHSO3. The modification of the starches was verified by volumetry, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Then, three WBDFs were formulated in which only the added polymer (NCS, S-g-IA_APS, and a commercial starch (CPS)) was varied to control the fluid losses. The physico-chemical, rheological, and filtering properties of the formulated systems were evaluated in terms of density (ρ), pH, plastic viscosity (µp), apparent viscosity (µa), yield point (Yp), gel strength (Rg), and filtrated volume (VAPI). In order to evaluate the resistance to temperature and contaminants of the WBDFs, they were subjected to high pressure and high temperature filtering (VHPHT). The filter control agents were also subjected to aging and contamination with cement and salt. The S-g-IA_APS addition improved the filtering behavior at a high pressure and temperature by 38%. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Polymeric Materials: Surfaces, Interfaces and Bioapplications II)
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