Abstract

Summary The occurrence of barite sag has been a well recognized but poorly understood phenomenon in the drilling industry resulting in problems such as lost circulation, well control and stuck pipe. The financial impact on drilling costs, usually resulting from rig-time lost while circulating and conditioning the drilling fluid system, is not trivial. Recurring barite sag problems reportedly have resulted in the loss of drilling projects. Originally thought to occur under static conditions, barite sag is recognized now to occur more readily under dynamic, low-shear-rate conditions. Industry experts have offered a variety of measuring parameters, based upon empirical data, that only partially correlate with the occurrence of barite sag. Prediction of barite sag in dynamic flow has created an engineering challenge. The effect of shear rate on dynamic barite sag, for invertemulsion drilling fluids, has been studied and quantified using new and advanced technology. A new field viscometer capable of measuring viscosity at shear rates of 0.0017 sec−1 and an eccentric wellbore-hydraulics model were used to develop and understand this relationship. Changes in mud weight as a function of shear rate, hole angle, annular velocity (AV), and eccentricity correlate with ultralow-shear-rate viscosity. Based upon experimental results, field technology has been developed to predict the potential for barite sag of invert-emulsion drilling fluids and to provide remedial measures through ultralow-shear-rate-viscosity modification. The efficacy of using traditional rheological measurements as indicators of barite sag potential is addressed.

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