Abstract

The effect of the addition of Gadolinium oxide (Gd2O3) up to 10 wt.% in bauxite was studied and its thermal behavior compared with pure bauxite. The incorporation of Gd2O3 is of technological interest for the design of smart traceable ceramic proppants used for unconventional gas and oil well stimulation. These high macroscopic neutron capture cross section proppants are used to obtain relevant information, such as the location and height of the created hydraulic fractures, through a neutron based detection technology. The study comprised a set of thermal and sintering behavior analyses up to 1500 ?C of mixtures up to 10 wt.% addition of Gd2O3. The developed texture and microstructure was also assessed. A simple mechanical characterization was performed as well. Fully-dense pore-free microstructures were developed, with alumina and mullite as the main crystalline phases. Gadolinium secondary and ternary alumino-silicate phases were also observed after thermal treatment. These present a needle morphology that might result in reinforcement mechanisms. No important glassy phase was detected; although sintering was enhanced, the Gd2O3 oxide main role was found to be as a sintering aid rather than a strict flux agent. The mechanical behavior remained fragile with the rare oxide addition. In fact, the mechanical resistance increased up to 20 wt.% for the 10 wt.% added sample. The oxide addition together with the bauxite dehydroxilation mass loss resulted in materials with up to 1.5 x 105 (c.u.) macroscopic neutron capture cross section materials. The obtained results permit to define design strategies of high macroscopic neutron capture ceramic materials for wellbore and developed fractures description.

Highlights

  • Ceramic proppants are frequently used in hydraulic fracturing of unconventional oil and gas reservoirs

  • Ceramic proppants belong to the Al2O3SiO2 system and are manufactured from bauxite and/or kaolin clays (US Patent 8,234,072 B2); [2,3,4,5]

  • In this work we describe the effect of gadolinium oxide addition in the thermal behavior of bauxite and evaluate the changes in the technological properties of the resulting ceramics

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Summary

Introduction

Ceramic proppants are frequently used in hydraulic fracturing of unconventional oil and gas reservoirs. Methods to identify proppants in induced formation fractures have been proposed (US Patent 8,234,072 B2, US 8,648,309) and applied [6,7,8,9][10,11,12,13,14,15] These methods require the incorporation of a suitable high thermal neutron capture element, such as gadolinium or samarium, into the proppant grain during the ceramic manufacturing process. The addition of elements such as gadolinium (49,700 b) and samarium (5,922 b) increases the macroscopic thermal neutron capture cross section of the proppant and makes it detectable after placement in the fracture. The thermal behaviors of bauxite mixtures with gadolinium oxide are of technological interest

Objectives
Mixture formulations
Processing: powder mixing and sintering
Bauxite – Gd2O3 mixtures characterizations
Results and Discussion
HSM - TMA
Developed crystalline and non-crystalline phases
Sintering parameters and textural properties
Spatial distribution of Gd atoms
Mechanical properties of the developed materials
Conclusion
34. Phase evolution during reactive sintering by viscous flow
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