Abstract

The sagging tendency of hematite in drilling mud is a common challenge occurring at high-pressure and high-temperature (HP/HT) applications. This work studies the performance of hematite-based invert emulsion mud for HP/HT conditions and provides a solution to prevent the hematite settlement using a combination of ilmenite with hematite. Practical mud formulation was utilized over a range of ilmenite/hematite ratios (0/100, 20/80, 40/60, and 50/50%) to study sagging behaviour. From the sag tests, the optimum combination proportion was determined. Thereafter, the density, emulsion stability, rheological and viscoelastic properties, and filtration conduct for the formulated mud were evaluated. The experiments were conditioned as per the standards of the American Petroleum Institute. The obtained results of sagging experiments indicated that including 50% of ilmenite mitigated the hematite settling and reduced the sag tendency towards the safe range. A slight drop (4%) in mud weight was noticed upon adding the ilmenite, whereas the emulsion stability was enhanced from 551 to 574 volts with the 50% ilmenite content. The rheology and viscoelasticity measurements showed that 50/50% combination improved the yield point (YP) by 50% with a trivial 1 cP increment on plastic viscosity (PV), hence enhancing the YP/PV ratio by 46%. Also, the gelling strength was enhanced resulting in flat rheology and better gel structure. The filtration behaviour of 50% ilmenite mud was improved compared to blank hematite as it resulted in 21, 15, and 17% reduction on the filtrated volume, filter cake weight, and thickness, respectively. This study provides a solution for hematite sagging issue at HP/HT using combined weighting agents, which contributes to enhancing the mud stability and avoiding several well control issues and related operational and technical challenges that eventually will economize the drilling cost and time.

Highlights

  • Two types of drilling muds are used [1,2,3,4]

  • Breakdown of drilling fluid stability usually occurs by solid settlement of weighting agents

  • This study is aimed at providing a solution for preventing the settling of hematite particles in invert emulsion mud at high-pressure and high-temperature (HP/HT) applications and improving the mud suspension capacity by employing a range of ilmenite/hematite combination ratios (0/100, 20/80, 40/60, and 50/50%)

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Summary

Introduction

Two types of drilling muds are used (i.e., aqueousbased and nonaqueous-based mud) [1,2,3,4]. Breakdown of drilling fluid stability usually occurs by solid settlement (sagging) of weighting agents Many factors affect this sagging phenomenon such as gravity, drilling parameters, and mud properties which results in significant variation in mud weight, deterioration of mud performance, and several well control challenges [8,9,10,11]. These technical and operational issues necessitate a choice of efficient weighting agents to ensure mud consistency

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