Subterranean materials that swell or increase in volume when exposed to water are referred to as “shale”. Shale is commonly encountered during the drilling of oil well bores and these cuttings can be problematic when it degrades into smaller particles. At the surface of the well bore larger drilled cuttings can be removed by solids control equipment, but shale particles traveling up the bore will degrade into smaller particles that may adversely affect the stability of the well bore.
By incorporating a shale inhibitor in the drilling fluid or “mud”, the breakdown of shale cuttings into smaller particles can be prevented. Traditionally oil based materials have been used as drilling fluids, but environmental regulations have led to the use of aqueous fluids. To prevent adverse reactions of the aqueous drill fluids with shale, a shale inhibitor is used. A shale inhibitor minimizes tendency of shale to absorb water and degrade into small particles.
Accordingly, it is an object of this invention to provide a new and improved method of shale inhibition.
What is described herein is a method of shale inhibition comprising adding a two-phase polymer system of a water soluble copolymer of vinyl pyrrolidone and dimethylamino propyl methacrylamide and in-situ formed water-insoluble particles of said copolymer, or, alternatively, a water-soluble copolymer of methylvinyl ether and maleic anhydride, into a drilling well fluid under aqueous, high temperature, high salinity conditions.
A 2-4 mm particle size London Clay was used as the test material. The salinity of the test fluid was controlled by adding 40 g of KCl to each 350 g of fluid. A conversion of “40 pounds per barrel (ppb) KCl” is recommended by The American Petroleum Institute.
To test a given polymer composition for its shale/cutting dispersion ability, the composition is hot rolled to the test temperature with sized clay typical of a geological area for oil exploration for a period of 16 hours. The salinity of the aqueous polymer solution is also controlled to meet the test requirements. The sized clay sample is then sieved, washed, dried and weighed. The recovered shale is reported as a percentage of the original weight. A good shale inhibitor is indicated by a high percentage recovery, i.e. it has prevented the clay from swelling and breaking down into smaller particles. A >90% recovery is considered an excellent value.
The experimental test procedure is based on The American Petroleum Institute's Recommended Practice 131/ISO 10416:2002.
This test involves the use of a hot roll oven such as supplied by Fann Instruments. This equipment can rotate a glass bottle containing a test fluid and clay at a selected speed and temperature. A standard bench top horizontal roller mixer was modified with an infrared light so that the desired temperature of the test was maintained throughout.
Procedure:
The control was 40 ppb KCl fluid with no shale inhibitor (A). The invention shale inhibitor materials are listed below as (B) and (C).
Test Fluids:
(A) 40 ppb KCl
(B) 3% v/v Setleze™ 3000, 40 ppb KCl
(C) 3% v/v Gantrez® AN-169 (10% aqueous solution), 40 ppb KCl.
The test compositions are given in Table 1 below.
The results are shown in Table 2 below.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3654164 | Sperry | Apr 1972 | A |
6020289 | Dymond | Feb 2000 | A |
6800696 | Saito | Oct 2004 | B2 |
20050101512 | Shah et al. | May 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070105723 A1 | May 2007 | US |