doctoralThesis
Pastas de cimento para aplicação em poços de petróleo com zonas fraturadas
Fecha
2018-03-23Registro en:
ARAÚJO FILHO, Romero Gomes da Silva. Pastas de cimento para aplicação em poços de petróleo com zonas fraturadas. 2018. 111f. Tese (Doutorado em Engenharia Química) - Centro de Tecnologia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2018.
Autor
Araújo Filho, Romero Gomes da Silva
Resumen
Hydrocarbon deposits made up of oil and natural gas occur naturally throughout the world.
Such deposits are normally contained within rocks called "reservoir rocks", usually sandstones
or carbonates. These deposits exist in varying conditions of pressure, temperature and depth,
from a few hundred to thousands of meters deep. During the drilling of the oil well, to reach
the reservoir rocks, it is common to find areas with high permeability or naturally fractured
zones, where there is the possibility that some or all of the cement or the drilling fluid used is
lost, that is: penetrate the formation where the drilling and/or cementing is occurring. Such
events are known in the industry as "fluid loss" and may cause several undesirable effects,
among them, loss of control of the well during drilling/completion or failures in the
cementation, which may even lead to loss of the well or serious accidents. Commercially, there
are alternatives for the development of cement slurries with fluid loss control for the formation.
However, most of these solutions have high costs and low guarantee of efficiency. Due to the
reduction in the operating margins of the oil industry and the reduction of the oil price, there is
a need for increasingly optimized processes, reducing costs and potential for failure. In this
work, a set of statistical plans was carried out to determine the best cement paste that could be
developed with materials used for fluid loss control and, among these materials, how they would
behave in the loss of fluid. The studied pulp was developed with vermiculite, calcium chloride
and nanosilica, studying the action of vermiculite as a reducing agent of the system. In addition
to these, polystyrene sponge was also added to the slurry to act as a fluid loss controller. It was
possible to obtain stable compositions with high water/cement ratio, suitable rheological
properties and low densities, which were set at 12.5 lb/gal and excellent fluid loss control.
Stability tests on settling showed that the pastes were stable under the proposed conditions, and
the compressive strength tests showed values of the order of 10 MPa. The action of the foam
contributed with the reduction of up to 97.5% of the loss of fluid to the formation, compared to
other non-foamed pastes. Thus, it has been demonstrated that the foam is an agent of great
utility in controlling the loss of fluid for formation.