Abstract

Hydrate formation is a significant issue while drilling into deep-water reservoirs containing gas hydrates. They may form in the drilling fluid flowlines, wellbore annulus, and ram cavities of blowout preventers. The natural gums, i.e., xanthan gum (XG) and gum acacia (GA), and their two graft copolymers with acrylamide (AAm), i.e., XG-g-PAAm and GA-g-PAAm, have been synthesized and tested as low-dosage hydrate inhibitors using THF hydrate systems via temperature-augmented visual method. XG-g-PAAm and GA-g-PAAm have shown better inhibition efficiencies and higher induction times than XG and GA. All of these inhibitors are then tested as drilling fluid additives to the formulated water-based drilling fluid systems (WBDFs). The formulated WBDFs contained 0.4 w/v % of each carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), polyanionic cellulose (PAC), and 5 w/v % of potassium chloride (KCl). The rheology of the formulated WBDFs has been tested at an ambient temperature (293 K) and low temperature (275 K). The rheological parameters of WBDFs obtained from the experiments are within permissible limits with an inhibitor concentration of 0.5 w/v %. The rheological data are then fitted to the Bingham–Plastic (B–P) model and Herschel–Bulkley (H–B) model. The coefficient of determination’s (R2) upper and lower limits for the B–P model is 0.9715–0.9969 for 0.5 w/v % GA- and 0.5 w/v % XG-g-PAAm-containing WBDF systems. Again, for the H–B model, the range for R2 is from 0.9891 to 0.9980 for 0.5 w/v % GA- and 0.5 w/v % XG-containing WBDFs. Hence, the R2 showed a better agreement with the H–B model than with the B–P model. These observations suggest that XG, GA, XG-g-PAAm, and GA-g-PAAm may be used as hydrate inhibitors in the formulated WBDFs while drilling into gas hydrate reservoirs.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call