Delivery of Particulate Material Below Ground
A wellbore fluid is an aqueous carrier liquid with first and second hydrophobic particulate materials suspended therein. The first hydrophobic particles have a higher specific gravity than the second hydrophobic particles and the fluid also comprises a gas to wet the surface of the particles and bind them together as agglomerates. The fluid may be a fracturing fluid or gravel packing fluid and the first particulate material may be proppant or gravel. The lighter second particulate material and the gas both reduce the density of the agglomerates which form so that they settle more slowly from the fluid, or are buoyant and do not settle. This facilitates transport and placement in a hydraulic fracture or gravel pack. One application of this is when fracturing a gas-shale with slickwater. The benefit of reduced settling is better placement of proppant so that a greater amount of the fracture is propped open.
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This Application is a divisional application of currently co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/868,165, filed 25 Aug. 2010 titled “Agglomeration Systems For Improved Proppant Suspension And Transport” to Trevor Hughes, et. al., the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety for all intents and purposes.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe invention relates to delivery of particulate material to a location below ground. A significant application is as part of a method of hydraulic fracturing of a subterranean reservoir formation, placing proppant in the fracture so as to keep the fracture open as a flow path. However, the invention also extends to other applications where placing of particulate material underground, notably within subterranean reservoirs, is required. It is envisaged that the invention will be used in connection with exploration for, and production of, oil and gas.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONPlacing particulate material at a location below ground is a very significant part of a hydraulic fracturing operation. It may also be done in the context of various other operations carried out on underground wells including placing a gravel pack when completing a well. Hydraulic fracturing is a well established technique for reservoir stimulation. Fluid is pumped under pressure into a subterranean formation, forcing portions of the formation apart and creating a thin cavity between them. When pumping is discontinued the natural pressure in the subterranean formation tends to force the fracture to close. To prevent the fracture from closing completely it is normal to mix a solid particulate material (termed a proppant) with the fracturing fluid at the surface and use the fluid to carry the proppant into the fracture. When the fracture is allowed to close, it closes onto the proppant and a flow path to the wellbore between the proppant particles remains open. The proppant is then under considerable pressure from the formation rock pressing on it.
When the proppant is mixed with the fracturing fluid at the surface and pumped into the wellbore it is subjected to very high shear. The proppant-laden fluid then flows down the wellbore under conditions of lower shear. Subsequently it turns and flows out of the wellbore and into the fracture in the formation. Entry to the fracture may be associated with an increase in shear, in particular if the wellbore is cased and the fluid passes through perforations in the wellbore casing to enter the fracture. Once the fluid enters the fracture, and as the fracture propagates and extends into the reservoir, the fluid is subjected to much less shear. Suspended solid begins to settle out. Subsequently pumping is discontinued, allowing the fracture to close onto the proppant packed in the fracture.
In order that the fluid can convey particulate material in suspension, and place it across the fracture face, it is conventional to include a viscosity-enhancing thickening agent in the fluid. Typically the fluid is then formulated so as to achieve a viscosity of at least 100 centipoise at 100 sec−1 at the temperature of the reservoir. Guar is widely used for this purpose. Guar derivatives and viscoelastic surfactants may also be used. However, for some fracturing operations, especially where the rock has low permeability so that leak off into the rock is not a significant issue, it is preferred to pump a fluid, often called “slickwater”, which is water or salt solution containing a small percentage of friction reducing polymer which does not significantly enhance viscosity as much as a thickening agent such as guar. The fluid then has low viscosity. This considerably reduces the energy required in pumping but keeping particulate material in suspension becomes much more difficult and a higher pump flow rate is commonly used.
As recognized in Society of Petroleum Engineers Papers SPE98005, SPE102956 and SPE1125068 conventional proppant particles suspended in slickwater pumped into a large fracture will settle out more quickly than is desired and form a so-called “bank” or “dune” close to the wellbore. Because of this premature settling, proppant may not be carried along the fracture to prop the full length of the fracture and proppant may not be placed over the full vertical height of the fracture. When pumping is stopped and the fracture is allowed to close, parts of the fracture further from the wellbore may not contain enough proppant to keep them sufficiently open to achieve the flow which would be desirable As a result, the propped and effective fracture size may be less than the size created during fracturing.
One approach to improving the transport of particulate proppant has been to use a material of lower specific gravity in place of the conventional material which is sand or other relatively heavy mineral (sand has a specific gravity of approximately 2.65). Society of Petroleum Engineers paper SPE84308 describes a lightweight proppant having a specific gravity of only 1.75 which is a porous ceramic material coated with resin so that pores of the ceramic material remain air-filled. This paper also describes an even lighter proppant of specific gravity 1.25 which is based on ground walnut hulls. This is stated to be a “resin impregnated and coated chemically modified walnut hull”.
These lightweight proppants are more easily suspended and transported by slickwater and their use is further discussed in SPE90838 and SPE98005, the latter paper demonstrating that settling out is reduced compared to sand, although not entirely avoided.
There have been a number of other disclosures of proppants lighter than sand. For example U.S. Pat. No. 4,493,875 (3M) describes a novel proppant consisting of composite particles, the core of which is a conventional particle such as silica sand and the coating or shell of which is a thin void-containing layer such that the overall density of the composite particle approaches that of the fracturing fluid. Preferably, the coating/shell comprises hollow glass microspheres embedded in an adhesive which bonds to the core.
US patent application 2008/277,115 A1 (Rediger et al., Georgia-Pacific Chemicals, Inc.,) also describes a composite proppant which is a porous ceramic or a silica sand coated with a low density material (e.g. cork particles) which is bound to the substrate using a Novolac resin crosslinked with hexamine—the resultant example proppants have specific gravities in the range 1.94-2.37 kg/m3.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,491,444 (Oxane Materials, Inc.) describes a process for making proppant particles by creating a shell around a template particle which may be hollow. The particles have specific gravities in a range extending to less than 1.0.
US2005/096207 and US2006/016598 (Thomas Urbanek) describe processes for making low density ceramic proppant particles. The products are claimed to have a specific gravity as low as 1.0 in the second of these documents.
A recognized issue with lightweight proppants is that they may not be as strong as sand and are at risk of becoming partially crushed when a hydraulic fracture is allowed to close on the proppant placed within it. An approach to the suspension of particulate proppant which has recognized this issue is disclosed in US2007/015669, also in WO2009/009886 and in “Lightening the Load” New Technology Magazine, January/February 2010 pages 43 and 44. According to the teachings of these documents, a conventional proppant such as sand is treated to render its surface hydrophobic and is added to the slurry of proppant and water. Bubbles adsorb to the hydrophobic solid particles so that the adsorbed gas gives the particles a lower effective density. The literature describing this approach advocates it on grounds that the conventional sand is both cheaper and stronger than lightweight proppant.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAccording to one aspect of the present invention there is provided a wellbore fluid comprising an aqueous carrier liquid and first and second hydrophobic particulate materials suspended therein, where the first hydrophobic particles have a higher specific gravity than the second hydrophobic particles, the fluid also comprising a gas to wet the surface of the particles and bind them together as agglomerates.
In a second aspect the invention provides a method of delivering particulate material below ground, comprising supplying, underground, a composition comprising an aqueous carrier liquid in which there are suspended at least two particulate materials which are hydrophobic, where a first one of these materials has a higher specific gravity than a second one, the fluid also comprising a gas wetting the surface of the particles and binding the particles together such that agglomerates of the particulate materials held together by the gas are present below ground.
In some embodiments of this invention the delivery below ground is done in the course of fracturing a reservoir formation. This may be a gas reservoir and the fracturing step may be followed by producing gas, gas condensate or a combination of them from the formation through the fracture and into a production conduit in fluid communication therewith.
Agglomeration may be prevented or reversed when-the composition is subjected to shear. As already mentioned a composition which is pumped downhole is subjected to varying amounts of shear in the course of the journey downhole. Consequently agglomeration may take place at the subterranean location to which the particulate material is delivered. However, it is possible that agglomeration may take place or commence in the course of flow towards the subterranean location where the material will serve its purpose.
It will be appreciated that the present invention makes use of two materials which are particulate in the sense that each of them is present as many small particles and uses them to serve two purposes. The first particulate material is a material which it is desired to place at a subterranean location. In significant forms of this invention it serves as a proppant placed in a hydraulic fracture. The second particulate material aids transport by assisting suspension in the carrier fluid. The agglomerates will contain both the denser first particles and the lighter second particles. The presence of the lighter particles helps to reduce the density of the agglomerates, which is beneficial because agglomerates of lower density will settle out of the carrier liquid more slowly and as a result they can be transported more effectively to their intended destination.
The presence of gas in the agglomerates of hydrophobic particles also reduces their overall density. This is consistent with the teaching of prior documents to utilize adsorbed gas to enhance buoyancy. However, we have found that the volume of gas which can be incorporated into stable agglomerates is limited and may not reduce the effective density to the extent which might be hoped for. Secondly, when a particulate material is made lighter by means of adsorbed gas, that gas will be compressed by the increasing hydrostatic pressure as it is pumped downhole into a fracture. The volume occupied by gas will thus be reduced relative to the particulate material. Consequently, the volume of gas which must be supplied at the surface, in order to provide a desired volume of gas downhole, may be large.
When both lighter and denser particulates are agglomerated with gas, in accordance with this invention, the overall density of the particulates may be lower than would be achievable without the lighter particulate material. Secondly a smaller volume of gas may be required in order to achieve the desired reduction of density under downhole hydrostatic pressure. Nevertheless it should be appreciated that when agglomerates are formed in accordance with this invention the amount of gas contained in them may be less than the maximum possible
Inhibiting the settling out of particulate material allows it to be transported more effectively to its intended destination. In the context of hydraulic fracturing the length and/or vertical height of fracture (i.e. the fracture area) which remains propped open after pumping has ceased is greater than would be possible if only the first particulate material was present. The compositions used in this invention may be formulated such that the resulting agglomerates formed in accordance with this invention have a density not exceeding 1.4 g/ml and preferably not exceeding 1.1 g/ml. In some embodiments of this invention agglomerates are at or close to neutral buoyancy or are light enough to float in the carrier liquid and do not settle.
The denser first particulate material may have greater strength to resist crushing than does the lighter second particulate material. When the fracture is allowed to close onto the particulate material, the agglomerates will be squeezed and eventually subjected to the crushing pressure of the rock formation. The second, lighter, particulate material may be crushed and deformed so that it does not function as a proppant, but this failure of the second material will be acceptable because the first material has been placed in the fracture and acts as the desired proppant. The overall result is an improvement in the effectiveness of a fracturing operation because the length of fracture which remains propped open is greater than would be the case if the first particulate material was used alone.
It is also possible that the lighter second particulate material has adequate strength to resist crushing but is more expensive than the first particulate material. In this event the use of both particulate materials gives an economic benefit: the second material assists transport and leads to the benefit that proppant is again carried further into the fracture then would be the case if the first, denser proppant was used alone, while but the use of a mixture of particulate materials is less expensive than using only the more expensive second material.
The first hydrophobic particles (which are the denser particulate material) may have a specific gravity of 1.8 or above, possibly at least 2.0 or 2.5, although it is also possible that the first particulate material could be a lightweight material such as material with specific gravity in a range from 1.5 or 1.6 up to 1.8. The second, lighter hydrophobic particulate material may have a specific gravity less than 1.5 and preferably less than 1.3. The second particulate material may possibly have a specific gravity not greater than 1.0. The amounts of the first and second particulate materials may be such that they have a ratio by volume in a range from 5:1 to 1:5, possibly 4:1 to 1:4 and possibly 3:1 to 1:4.
Sometimes a figure quoted in the literature for the density of a particulate material is a bulk density which is the mean density of a quantity of the particulate material together with anything present in the interstitial spaces between particles. On this basis, wet sand has a higher density than dry sand because the bulk density includes water between particles of sand. By contrast, specific gravity of the particulate materials refers to the specific gravity of the particles themselves, without considering interstitial material. For individual particles specific gravity is the weight of a particle relative to the weight of an equal volume of water. If the particles are formed of a homogenous material it is the specific gravity of that material. If the particles are hollow the specific gravity is still the weight of a particle relative to the weight of an equal volume of water, but this value of specific gravity is a value for the outer shell and the enclosed hollow interior together.
The first and second particles may be formed of materials which are inherently hydrophobic or may be particles which are hydrophilic but have a hydrophobic coating on their surface. For instance, ordinary silica sand which is commonly used as a proppant is hydrophilic and is not agglomerated by oil or gas in the presence of water. By contrast, we have found that sand which has been surface treated to make it more hydrophobic will spontaneously agglomerate in the presence of oil, air or nitrogen gas. The first particulate material used for this invention may be such hydrophobically modified sand. As an alternative to sand or other mineral, the particulate material could be a manufactured ceramic proppant, treated to give it a hydrophobically modified surface.
A quantitative indication of the surface polarity of a solid (prepared with a smooth, flat surface) is the concept of critical surface tension pioneered by Zisman (see Fox and Zisman J. Colloid Science Vol 5 (1950) pp 514-531 at page 529). It is a value of surface tension such that liquids having a surface tension against air which is lower than or equal to this value will spread on the surface of the solid whereas those of higher surface tension will remain as droplets on the surface, having a contact angle which is greater than zero. A strongly hydrophobic solid has a low critical surface tension. For instance the literature quotes a critical surface tension for polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) of 18.5 mN/m and for a solid coated with heptadecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetra-hydro-decyl-trichlorosilane the literature value of critical surface tension is 12 mN/m. By contrast the literature values of critical surface tension for soda-lime glass and for silica are 47 and 78 mN/m respectively.
We have found that an analogous measurement of the hydrophobicity of the surface of a particulate solid can be made by shaking the solid with a very hydrophobic oil (preferably a silicone oil) having a low surface tension and mixtures of ethanol and water with a progressively increasing proportion of ethanol. This may be done at a room temperature of 20° C. The surface tensions of a number of ethanol and water mixtures are tabulated in CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 86th edition, section 6 page 131.
Increasing the proportion of ethanol in the aqueous phase (i.e. the ethanol and water mixture) reduces its surface tension. Eventually a point is reached when the surface tension of the aqueous phase is so low that the solid can no longer be agglomerated by the oil. The boundary value at which agglomeration by the oil ceases to occur is a measure of the hydrophobicity of the solid and will be referred to as its “agglomeration limit surface tension” or ALST.
We have observed that particulate solids which can undergo spontaneous aggregation from suspension in deionised water on contact with oil always display an ALST value of approximately 40 mN/m or less. This ALST test covers a range of values of practical interest, but it should be appreciated that if no agglomeration takes place, this test does not give a numerical ALST value, but demonstrates that the surface does not have an ALST value of 40 mN/m or less. Moreover, if the surface has an ALST value below the surface tension of pure ethanol (22.4 mN/m at 20° C.), this test will not give a numerical ALST value but will show that the ALST value is not above 22.4 mN/m.
When particulate materials to be agglomerated are not inherently hydrophobic, a range of different methods can be used to modify the surface of solid particles to become more hydrophobic—these include the following, in which the first three methods provide covalent bonding of the coating to the substrate.
Organo-silanes can be used to attach hydrophobic organo-groups to hydroxyl-functionalized mineral substrates such as proppants composed of silica, silicates and alumino-silicates. The use of organosilanes with one or more functional groups (for example amino, epoxy, acyloxy, methoxy, ethoxy or chloro) to apply a hydrophobic organic layer to silica is well known. The reaction may be carried out in an organic solvent or in the vapour phase (see for example Duchet et al, Langmuir (1997) Vol 13 pp 2271-78).
Organo-titanates and organo-zirconates such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,623,783 can also be used. The literature indicates that organo-titanates can be used to modify minerals without surface hydroxyl groups, which could extend the range of materials to undergo surface modification, for instance to include carbonates and sulphates.
A polycondensation process can be used to apply a polysiloxane coating containing organo-functionalised ligand groups of general formula P—(CH2)3—X where P is a three-dimensional silica-like network and X is an organo-functional group. The process involves hydrolytic polycondensation of a tetraalkoxysilane Si(OR)4 and a trialkoxysilane (RO)3Si(CH2)3X. Such coatings have the advantage that they can be prepared with different molar ratios of Si(OR)4 and (RO)3Si(CH2)3X providing “tunable” control of the hydrophobicity of the treated surface.
A fluidized bed coating process can be used to apply a hydrophobic coating to a particulate solid substrate. The coating material would typically be applied as a solution in an organic solvent and the solvent then evaporated within the fluidized bed.
Adsorption methods can be used to attach a hydrophobic coating on a mineral substrate. A surfactant monolayer can be used to change the wettability of a mineral surface from water-wet to oil-wet. Hydrophobically modified polymers can also be attached by adsorption.
The surface modification processes above may be carried out as a separate chemical process before the wellbore fluid is formulated. Such pretreatment of solid material to make it hydrophobic would not necessarily be carried out at the well site; indeed it may be done at an industrial facility elsewhere and the pretreated material shipped to the well site. However, it is also possible that some of the above processes, especially an adsorption process, could be carried out at the well site as part of the mixing procedure in which the wellbore fluid is made.
Either or both of the particulate materials of this invention may be inherently hydrophobic but available hydrophobic materials tend to be lighter and thus more suitable as the second particulate material. Thus, one possibility within this invention is that the denser first particulate material is a solid mineral material such as sand with a hydrophobic coating on the exterior of the particles while the second, lighter, particles are an inherently hydrophobic material. Possible materials are natural or synthetic rubbers and hydrophobic polymers such as polyethylene and polypropylene. Polymers may be partially crosslinked or may contain strengthening fillers. For the sake of economy, hydrophobic materials may be materials which are being recycled after a previous use, for example comminuted recycled motor tyres or comminuted recycled polypropylene packaging. Other candidate materials are particles of coal or coal fractions.
Another possibility within this invention is that the second, lighter, particles are hollow. Glass microspheres with a hydrophobic coating are one possibility. We have found that such microspheres can remain intact under significant hydrostatic pressure, although they may later be crushed when a hydraulic fracture closes onto agglomerated proppant within it.
A range of glass microspheres (with a hydrophilic glass surface) are commercially available. Suppliers include 3M Inc and other manufacturers. Available microspheres have specific gravity ranging from 0.125 to 0.6 and the crush strength of such particles increases with their specific gravity. For example microspheres are available with a d50 median particle size of 40 micron, a specific gravity of 0.38 and crush strength able to withstand pressures up to 4000 psi (27.58 MPa). Microspheres are also available with d50 of 40 micron, a specific gravity of 0.6 and crush strength able to withstand pressures up to 10000 psi (68.95MPa). Commercially available hydrophilic glass spheres can be made hydrophobic by a surface coating applied by one of the methods mentioned above.
A further possibility is that the second particulate material is a porous solid, such as volcanic pumice, with a hydrophobic coating. Such a material will have light weight because of the air filled pores: the aqueous carrier liquid will not invade these pores because of their small diameter and the hydrophobic coating.
Both particulate solids must of course form a separate solid phase when the agglomeration takes place. At this time they must therefore be insoluble in the carrier liquid, or at least be of low solubility. For many applications of this invention it will be desirable that the particulate solids remains insoluble after agglomeration has taken place. However, it is within the scope of some forms of this invention that the agglomerates might not have a permanent existence and might in time dissolve in surrounding liquid. For instance, incorporation of hydrophobically modified calcium carbonate within a mixed agglomerate with hm-silica would lead to agglomerates which could be partially dissolved by subsequent flow of an acidic solution able eventually to penetrate the hydrophobic coating.
The solid particles used in this invention may vary considerably in shape and size. They may have irregular shapes typical of sand grains which can be loosely described as “more spherical than elongate” where the aspect ratio between the longest dimension and the shortest dimension orthogonal to it might be 5 or less or even 2 or less. Other shapes such as cylinders or cubes are possible, notably if the particles are a manufactured ceramic product. A further possibility is that particulate material may have a platy form, as is the case with mica particles (indeed hydrophobically modified mica particles may be used as the first particulate material). In general, median particle sizes are unlikely to be larger than 5 mm. Median particle sizes are more likely to be 3 mm or less and preferably are 1.6 mm or less. Embodiments of this invention may use mixtures of solid particles where the median particle size is less than 1 mm. It is possible, especially for the denser first material, that at least 90% by volume of the particles have a longest dimension of less than 5 mm, possibly 3 mm or less.
Particle sizes may conveniently be specified by reference to sieve sizes, as is traditional for proppant materials. American Petroleum Institute Recommended Practices (API RP) standards 56 and 60 specify a number of proppant sizes by stating upper and lower US Sieve sizes. 90 wt % of a sample should pass the larger sieve but be retained on the smaller sieve. Thus ‘20/40 sand’ specifies sand having a particle size distribution such that 90 wt % of it passes 20 mesh (840 micron) but is retained on 40 mesh (420 micron). Correspondingly 90 wt % of a sample of 70/140 sand, which is the smallest size recognized by these standards, passes a 70 mesh (210 micron) sieve but is retained on a 140 mesh (105 micron) sieve. It will be appreciated that for any proppant specified by upper and lower sieve sizes, the median and mean particle sizes fall somewhere between the upper and lower sieve sizes.
Another method for determining size of particles is the commonly used technique of low angle laser light scattering, more commonly known as laser diffraction. Instruments for carrying out this technique are available from a number of suppliers including Malvern Instruments Ltd., Malvern, UK. The Malvern Mastersizer is a well known instrument which determines the volumes of individual particles, from which mean and median particle size can be calculated using computer software which accompanies the instrument. When determining particle sizes using such an instrument, the size of an individual particle is reported as the diameter of a spherical particle of the same volume, the so-called “equivalent sphere”. Volume median diameter denoted as D[v,05] or d50 is a value of particle size such that 50% (by volume) of the particles have a volume larger than the volume of a sphere of diameter d50 and 50% of the particles have a volume smaller than the volume of a sphere of diameter d50. Particle sizes determined by low angle laser light scattering are similar to particle sizes determined by sieving if the particles are approximately spherical.
Particle size distribution is then conveniently indicated by the values of d10 and d90 measured in the same way. 10% by volume of the particles in a sample have an equivalent diameter smaller than d10. 90% by volume are smaller than d90 and so 10% by volume are larger than d90. The closer together the values of d10 and d90, the narrower is the particle size distribution.
In forms of this invention where the first particulate material is a proppant for hydraulic fractures, the first particles may have a d90 upper size similar to that of conventional proppant, such as 10 mesh (2 mm) or 20 mesh (840 microns). Their particle size properties may be such that
- d10>110 micron, possibly>120 micron or >150 micron
- d50<1 mm, possibly<800 micron
- d90<3 mm, possibly<2 mm or <1 mm
The particle size distribution may be sufficiently wide that d90 is more than 5 times d10, possibly more than 10 times d10. These particle size properties may also apply to other forms of this invention, such as those where the method of the invention is applied to preventing lost circulation, or achieving isolation of one zone from another.
However, it is an advantageous feature of this invention that it can be utilized with a first particulate material having a d50 of 105 microns or less. We have found that use of a fine particulate material of this size may be advantageous for fracturing shale, notably for fracturing of a gas-bearing shale. Using a fine mesh proppant, that is to say a proppant of small particle size, may be expected to lead to fractures with lower permeability and conductivity than would be achieved with a proppant of larger size. Nevertheless, such fractures can carry gas with acceptable flow rates. The benefit of conveying proppant further into a fracture, so that the fracture has a greater effective size after it closes onto the proppant outweighs the lower conductivity. Overall, the stimulation of the formation is greater.
A fine mesh proppant may have d90 below 150 microns, d50 below 105 micron and d10 of at least 10 microns. A possible material for use as a fine, first particulate material is hydrophobically modified flyash. So called flyash is recovered from the flue gas of coal fired power plants, and is a small particle size material with a high silica content. It typically has d90 below 100 micron and specific gravity in the range 1.9 to 2.4.
The second particulate material used in this invention may or may not be of similar particle size to the first. One possibility is that the second particulate material is of somewhat smaller particle size than the first particulate material, especially if the first material has d50>120 microns. A candidate for a small size second particulate material is hydrophobically modified hollow spheres, where the hollow spheres (also termed cenospheres) are extracted from flyash. (Cenospheres which form spontaneously in the combustion process are a small percentage of flyash).
It is also possible that one or both of the particulate materials consists of, or includes, hydrophobic elongate fibres. Including fibres in the agglomerated solid may lead to agglomerates which are resistant to change in shape after agglomeration. For fibres, as for other particulate materials, it is preferred that the ALST value does not exceed 38 mN/m. An example of hydrophobic fibres which could be used alone or mixed with other particulate solid is polypropylene fibres having median diameter in a range from 50 to 500 micron and a median length of 3 to 10 mm. Another possibility would be glass fibres of these dimensions modified with a hydrophobic surface layer, suitably by one of the methods mentioned above.
In the context of hydraulic fracturing, it has been found useful to use a first particulate material which serves as a proppant and has a low aspect ratio together with a second, lighter, material which consists of, or includes, hydrophobic fibres. These fibres then reduce the density of the agglomerates during transport and also hinder the eventual settling of proppant from suspension by reason of their shape (which is the subject of another patent application filed concurrently with this application).
The agglomerating agent which binds the particles together as agglomerates is a gas. This gas must be sufficiently hydrophobic to form a phase which does not dissolve in the aqueous carrier liquid, although it is possible for it to have some limited water solubility, as is the case with air and with nitrogen. The volume of gas provided must be sufficient that it agglomerates the particles at downhole pressure. As pointed out above, however, the amount of gas required to bring about agglomeration will be less than if gas was the sole means to reduce the density of particulates.
As mentioned above the amount of gas which can be retained in agglomerates has an upper limit. We have found that agglomeration by gas may be assisted and improved if a small amount of hydrophobic oil is present. However, the amount should be small, such as not more than 10% or not more than 5% or even not more than 2% by volume of the amount of gas downhole. If the amount of oil is larger, agglomeration occurs but the oil displaces gas from the agglomerates and so the amount of gas which can be held by agglomerates is reduced.
The aqueous carrier liquid which is used to transport the particles may be a non-viscous or slickwater formulation. Such a formulation is typically water or a salt solution containing at least one polymer which acts as a friction reducer. A combination of polymers may be used for this purpose. Polymers which are frequently used and referred to as “polyacrylamide” are homopolymers or copolymers of acrylamide. Incorporation of a copolymer can serve to give the “modified” polyacrylamide some ionic character. A polyacrylamide may considered a copolymer if it contains more than 0.1% by weight of other comonomers. Mixtures of homopolymers and copolymers may be used. Copolymers may include two or more different comonomers and may be random or block copolymers. The comonomers may include, for example, sodium acrylate. The polyacrylamide polymers and copolymers useful as friction reducers may include those having an average molecular weight of from about 1000 up to about 20 million, or possibly above, with from about 1 million to about 5 million being typical. Other suitable friction reducers may be used as well; for example vinyl sulfonates included in poly(2-acrylamido-2-methyl-1-propanesulfonic acid) also referred to as polyAMPS.
The polyacrylamide may be used in the treatment fluid an amount of from about 0.001% to about 5% by weight of the treatment fluid but the amount is frequently not over 1% or even 0.5% by weight by weight. In many applications, the polyacrylamide is used in an amount of from about 0.01% to about 0.3% by weight of the fluid. The polyacrylamide may be initially dissolved or dispersed as a concentrate in mineral oil or other liquid carrier to enhance the delivery or mixability prior to its addition to water or a salt solution to make the carrier liquid.
A slickwater formulation may be substantially free of viscosity-enhancing polymeric thickener and have a viscosity which is not much greater than water, for instance not more than 15 centipoise, which is about 15 times the viscosity of water, when viscosity is measured at 20° C. and a shear rate of 100 sec−1.
It is particularly envisaged that this invention will be used when fracturing a reservoir formation which has low permeability, so that slickwater is the fracturing fluid of choice. As mentioned above, this has considerable advantage when pumping into the formation but makes suspension of proppant much more difficult.
A reservoir formation of low permeability may well be a gas reservoir, although this is not inevitably so. It may be a gas-bearing shale. A formation of low permeability may have a permeability of no more than 10 millidarcies (10 mD), possibly no more than 1 millidarcy. Its permeability may be even lower, such as less than 100 microdarcy, or even less than 1 microdarcy.
This invention may also be used where the carrier liquid is a more traditional fracturing fluid incorporating a thickening agent to increase the viscosity of the fluid. Such a thickening agent may be a polymer. It may be a polysaccharide such as guar, xanthan or diutan or a chemically modified polysaccharide derivative such as hydroxyalkylcellulose or a hydroxyalkylguar. These polysaccharide thickeners may be used without cross linking or may be cross-linked to raise viscosity further. Viscoelastic surfactants are another possible thickening agent which may be used to increase viscosity. We have observed that some thickening of the carrier liquid does not prevent agglomeration, although it may be preferred that the viscosity is not allowed to become too high before agglomeration takes place.
The agglomeration of proppant particles will lead to some small-scale non-uniformity of the distribution of proppant within a fracture when the fracture is allowed to close onto the proppant. Distributing proppant throughout a fracture, but with some non-uniformity in the distribution of proppant (sometimes referred to as heterogeneous proppant placement) may be helpful in enhancing fracture conductivity. In some embodiments of this invention, localized non-unity may be deliberately enhanced.
One known method for heterogenous proppant placement which may be used in this invention is to pump a fluid containing suspended proppant alternately with a fluid containing less of the suspended proppant or none at all. This approach is the subject of U.S. Pat. No. 6,776,235. Another known method which may be employed is to pump the proppant together with a removable material, referred to as a ‘channelant’. After pumping has ceased and the fracture has closed onto proppant in the fracture, removal of the channelant leaves open pathways between islands or pillars of the proppant. This approach is the subject of WO2008/068645, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
A degradable channelant material may be selected from substituted and unsubstituted lactide, glycolide, polylactic acid, polyglycolic acid, copolymers of polylactic acid and polyglycolic acid, copolymers of glycolic acid with other hydroxy-, carboxylic acid-, or hydroxycarboxylic acid-containing moieties, copolymers of lactic acid with other hydroxy-, carboxylic acid-, or hydroxycarboxylic acid-containing moieties, and mixtures of such materials. Representative examples are polyglycolic acid or PGA, and polylactic acid or PLA. These materials function as solid-acid precursors, and undergo hydrolytic degradation in the fracture.
Agglomerates of hydrophobic particles and a gas as agglomerating agent will form spontaneously in an aqueous carrier liquid when the materials are mixed together. One possibility is that the particulate materials, carrier liquid and agglomerating gas are all mixed together at the surface and then pumped down a wellbore. In this case the particles may agglomerate before passing through the pumps. If so, they may be sheared apart by the pumps, but spontaneously reform downstream from the pumps as they pass down the wellbore.
A possibility to avoid passing the agglomerates through the pumps is that the gas is compressed at the surface and then admitted to the high pressure flowline downstream of the surface pumps which are driving the carrier liquid and the particulate materials into the wellbore. As a variant of this, the gas could be transported down the wellbore in a separate pipe so as to travel to a considerable depth underground before mixing with the particulate materials.
Another approach is to allow the materials to mix, but inhibit agglomeration for at least part of the journey of the carrier liquid and entrained materials to the subterranean location where the agglomerates are required. Some possibilities for this are as follows:
Encapsulation or coating. The particulate materials are coated with a hydrophilic material which dissolves slowly or undergoes chemical degradation under conditions encountered at the subterranean location, thereby exposing the hydrophobic surface within. Degradation may in particular be hydrolysis which de-polymerises an encapsulating polymer. While such hydrolytic degradation may commence before the overall composition has travelled down the wellbore to the reservoir, it will provide a delay before contact between agglomerating gas and exposed hydrophobic surface becomes significant.
A number of technologies are known for the encapsulation of one material within another material. Polymeric materials have frequently been used as the encapsulating material. Some examples of documents which describe encapsulation procedures are U.S. Pat. No. 4,986,354, WO 93/22537 and WO 03/106809. Encapsulation can lead to particles in which the encapsulated substance is distributed as a plurality of small islands surrounded by a continuous matrix of the encapsulating material. Alternatively encapsulation can lead to core-shell type particles in which a core of the encapsulated substance is enclosed within a shell of the encapsulating material. Both core-shell and islands-in-matrix type encapsulation may be used.
An encapsulating organic polymer which undergoes chemical degradation may have a polymer chain which incorporates chemical bonds which are labile to reaction, especially hydrolysis, leading to cleavage of the polymer chain. A number of chemical groups have been proposed as providing bonds which can be broken, including ester, acetal and amide groups. Cleavable groups which are particularly envisaged are ester and amide groups both of which provide bonds which can be broken by a hydrolysis reaction.
Generally, their rate of cleavage in aqueous solution is dependent upon the pH of the solution and its temperature. The hydrolysis rate of an ester group is faster under acid or alkaline conditions than neutral conditions. For an amide group, the decomposition rate is at a maximum under low pH (acidic) conditions. Low pH, that is to say acidic, conditions can also be used to cleave acetal groups.
Thus, choice of encapsulating polymer in relation to the pH which will be encountered after the particles have been placed at intended subterranean location may provide a control over the delay before the encapsulated material is released. Polymers which are envisaged for use in encapsulation include polymers of hydroxyacids, such as polylactic acid and polyglycolic acid. Hydrolysis liberates carboxylic acid groups, making the composition more acidic. This lowers the pH which in turn accelerates the rate of hydrolysis. Thus the hydrolytic degradation of these polymers begins somewhat slowly but then accelerates towards completion and release of the encapsulated material. Another possibility is that a polymer containing hydrolytically cleavable bonds may be a block copolymer with the blocks joined through ester or amide bonds.
Sensitivity to temperature. A development of the use of a hydrophilic coating makes use of the difference between surface temperatures and temperatures below ground, which are almost always higher than at the surface. During transit to the subterranean location, the carrier liquid and everything suspended in it will pass through a wellbore exposed to subterranean temperatures and will begin to heat up, but if the flow rate is substantial, the flowing composition will reach the subterranean location at a temperature well below the natural temperature at that location. In particular, in the case of hydraulic fracturing the fracturing fluid will leave the wellbore and enter the fracture at a temperature significantly below the reservoir temperature. A possibility, therefore, would be to coat the hydrophobic particles with a coating of a hydrophilic material which remains intact at surface temperatures, but melts or dissolves in the carrier liquid at the temperature encountered below ground.
Generating gas below ground. Another possible approach for delaying agglomeration during at least part of the journey of the materials to the subterranean location where the agglomerates are required is to generate the agglomerating gas chemically, for example by including aluminium powder in the composition and formulating the carrier liquid to be alkaline so that hydrogen is generated by reaction of aluminium and the aqueous alkaline carrier liquid. Conversely, iron or zinc particles could be incorporated in a fluid with pH below 7 to generate hydrogen. A further possibility for generating gas below ground would be to pump a neutral slickwater fluid containing suspended calcium carbonate particles, followed by an acidic slickwater fluid containing hydrophobic fibres and hydrophobic particulate proppant. Carbon dioxide would then be liberated below ground on contact between the acidic slickwater and the carbonate previously placed below ground. In the methods above for generating gas below ground, the solid material could be encapsulated in or coated with a material which dissolves or melts at the reservoir temperature, thus delaying the start of the chemical generation of gas. Another way to generate carbon dioxide would be to incorporate nanoparticulate polycarbonates which decompose, liberating carbon dioxide, at a temperature of around 150° C.
Discussion above has focused on placing particulate material below ground. However, the invention also has application to the removal of particulate material in wellbore clean-out. After hydrophobic particulate materials have been placed in a fracture (or other location underground) the removal of hydrophobic particulate material remaining in the wellbore can be carried out by using coiled tubing to pump gas, or a mixture of gas and aqueous liquid, into the bottom of the wellbore while the wellbore contains aqueous liquid. This gas will rise towards the surface. If it encounters hydrophobic particulate material it will agglomerate that material into lightweight particles which will rise or be carried upward to the surface.
It can be envisaged that if the amount of agglomerating agent is larger than the interstitial volume of a close packed arrangement, the particles would still be agglomerated but will not be in a completely close packed state. They would instead be slightly spaced as shown in
We have found that when hydrophobic particles are agglomerated with oil this does indeed happen. A quantity of oil in excess of the minimum amount required to bring about agglomeration can be included in the agglomerates. However, we have found that this does not happen, or does not happen to the same extent, when the agglomerating agent is gas.
By contrast, if a mixture of denser and lighter hydrophobic particulate materials is used in accordance with this invention, a smaller volume fraction of gas is needed to achieve neutral buoyancy in water. The particles in such an agglomerate do not need to be the same size.
The table below sets out some calculated densities for agglomerates containing hydrophobically modified sand mixed with polypropylene particles having a specific gravity of 0.9. Again the agglomerating agent is nitrogen gas.
It is apparent that neutral buoyancy, that is a density of 1 gm/ml, can be achieved with a smaller volume fraction of nitrogen if polypropylene particles are included.
Similar calculations were carried out for particulate mixtures containing hydrophobically modified sand and hydrophobically modified glass microspheres having specific gravity 0.6. The following combinations of materials and proportions were calculated to give agglomerates of neutral buoyancy (assuming that such agglomerates could be made and would be stable).
Even a second particulate material which is denser than water will reduce the amount of gas required to achieve neutral buoyancy. A mixture of 38 vol % hydrophobically modified sand and 62 vol % waste rubber having a specific gravity of 1.2 would require nitrogen in a volume fraction of 0.45 to achieve a density of 1 gm/ml, whereas sand alone would require a nitrogen volume fraction of 0.64.
In the following examples, Examples 1 to 4 illustrate the preparation of hydrophobically modified materials. Examples 5 onwards show the effect of using mixtures of hydrophobic particulate materials, in accordance with this invention.
EXAMPLE 1 Hydrophobic Modification of SandSand, having particle size between 20 and 40 US mesh (840 micron and 400 micron), i.e. 20/40 sand, was washed by mixing with ethanol at ambient temperature, then filtering, washing with deionised water and drying overnight at 80° C.
Quantities of this pre-washed sand were hydrophobically modified by treatment with various reactive organosilanes, using the following procedure. 75 gm pre-washed sand was added to a mixture of 200 ml toluene, 4 ml organo-silane and 2 ml triethylamine in 500 ml round bottomed flask. The mixture was refluxed under a nitrogen atmosphere for 4 to 6 hours. After cooling, the hydrophobically modified sand (hm-sand) was filtered off (on a Whatman glass microfiber GF-A filter) and then washed, first with 200 ml toluene, then 200 ml ethanol and then 800 ml deionised water. The hm-sand was then dried overnight at 80° C.
The above procedure was carried out using each of the following four reactive organo-silanes:
- 5.64 gm Heptadecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydro-decyl-triethoxysilane (>95% purity, specific gravity=1.41 gm/ml).
- 5.40 gm Tridecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydro-octyl-triethoxysilane (>95% purity, specific gravity=1.35 gm/ml).
- 3.53 gm Octadecyl-trimethoxysilane (90% purity, specific gravity=0.883 gm/ml).
- 5.93 gm Octadecyldimethyl 3-trimethoxysilylpropyl ammonium chloride (60% active solution in methanol, specific gravity=0.89 gm/ml).
For convenience the hydrophobic groups introduced by these materials will be referred to hereafter as C10F17H4-silyl, C8F13H4 silyl, C18H37-silyl and C18H37aminopropylsilyl, respectively.
It was appreciated that these quantities of organo-silane were far in excess of the stoichiometric amount required to react with all the hydroxyl groups on the surface of the sand particles. 20/40 sand has specific surface area 0.0092 m2/gm (calculated from particle size distribution determined by laser diffraction (Malvern Mastersizer) method). The theoretical maximum concentration of hydroxyl (—OH) groups per unit area of silica surface, is 4.5 hydroxyl groups per square nanometre. From these values it can be calculated that 75 gm sand has (at most) 3.1×1018 hydroxyl groups exposed on its surface. Using Avogadro's number, 5.64 gm (0.00924 mol) heptadecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetra-hydro-decyl-triethoxysilane contains 5.56×1021 molecules. Therefore there is a very high ratio of organo-silane molecules in the reaction solution to surface hydroxyl groups. The calculated number ratio in the case of the C10F17H4-silyl example above was organo-silane(solution)/OH(surface)=1792. It should be noted that at least some excess organosilane is removed from the treated sand during the filtration and washing stages.
EXAMPLE 2The procedure above was carried out with the following reduced quantities of organo-silane:
- 0.27 gm Heptadecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetra-hydro-decyl-triethoxysilane number ratio organo-silane(solution)/OH(surface)=85.8.
- 0.02 gm Heptadecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetra-hydro-decyl-triethoxysilane number ratio organo-silane(solution)/OH(surface)=6.4.
It was found the smallest amount of organo-silane was insufficient to render the sand adequately hydrophobic to be agglomerated.
EXAMPLE 3 Condensation CoatingPre-washed 20/40 sand, prewashed as in Example 1 above, was given a hydrophobic surface coating by the simultaneous condensation polymerization of tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) and tridecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydro-octyl-triethoxysilane in 3:1 molar ratio under basic conditions.
200 gm pre-washed sand, 12 ml of aqueous ammonia (NH4OH, 28%), 57 ml of absolute ethanol and 3 ml deionized water were mixed and stirred vigorously (Heidolph mechanical stirrer at 300-400 RPM) for 30 min. Then 0.73 gm (3.53 mmol) of TEOS and 0.6 gm (1.17 mmol) tridecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydro-octyl-triethoxysilane were added and stirred for 3.5 hrs at room temperature. The resulting hm-sand was then filtered off, washed with ethanol and then with deionized water and dried at 120° C. overnight. This procedure was also carried out using pre-washed 70/140 sand with a mixture of tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) and heptadecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetra-hydro-decyl-triethoxysilane.
EXAMPLE 4 Condensation Coating of Glass MicrospheresThe glass microspheres used had a mean diameter d50 of 40 micron and a specific gravity of 0.6. 20 gm microspheres, 12 ml of aqueous ammonia (NH4OH, 28%), 57 ml of absolute ethanol and 3 ml deionized water were mixed and stirred vigorously (Heidolph mechanical stirrer at 300-400 RPM) for 30 min. Then 0.73 gm (3.53 mmol) of TEOS and 0.6 gm (1.17 mmol) tridecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydro-octyl-triethoxysilane were added and stirred for 4 hrs at room temperature. The resulting hm-microspheres were then filtered off, washed with ethanol and then with deionized water and dried at 120° C. overnight.
EXAMPLE 5 Agglomeration of hm-Sand and PolypropyleneSample mixtures were prepared using 20/40 sand, hydrophobically modified with tridecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydro-octyl-triethoxysilane as in Example 3 and varying proportions of 20/40 polypropylene particles, having a specific gravity of 0.9. The amounts are given in the following table:
Each sample was mixed with 16 ml of deionised water in a bottle of about 30 ml capacity, thus leaving an air-filled headspace of about 10-15 ml in the bottle. The bottle was closed and shaken vigorously so that the solids could be agglomerated with air from the headspace.
In the case of the first sample, without polypropylene, a single agglomerate with a smoothly curved surface was formed. This demonstrated that hydrophobically modified 20/40 sand could be agglomerated with air. However, the agglomerate sank to the bottom of the bottle and no change was achieved through further shaking. Since the amount of air in the headspace was larger than the agglomerate formed, it was apparent that the amount of air in the agglomerate had reached the maximum which the agglomerate could retain, indicating that the amount of air which could be retained in the agglomerate was not a sufficiently large volume fraction to give an agglomerate of neutral buoyancy.
In the case of samples 2 and 3 with 0.2 g or 0.4 g polypropylene present the agglomerates again sank to the bottom of the bottle but were less firmly settled than the agglomerate without polypropylene, indicating that the polypropylene in the agglomerates together with the in them was reducing the density compared with the agglomerate without polypropylene. With 0.6 g or 1 g polypropylene present reduction of density went further and some of the agglomerates floated to the top of the water in the bottles.
Next nitrogen was bubbled into the bottles near the bottom of each one. Nearly all of the agglomerates formed from sample4 with 0.6 g polypropylene present floated in the water. In the case of sample 5 with 1.0 g polypropylene present, all the agglomerates floated in the water.
This experiment was repeated with the modification that five drops of dodecane were added to the samples before nitrogen was bubbled into the bottom of each bottle. Yet again the sample without polypropylene formed a single agglomerate which sank. The agglomerates from samples 4 and 5, with 0.6 g and 1 g polypropylene present all floated. This indicates that a small amount of oil, occupying only a small volume fraction, increases the efficacy of gas in reducing the density of agglomerates.
EXAMPLE 6The previous example was repeated using the same, hydrophobically modified 20/40 sand but smaller polypropylene particles all of which passed a 40 mesh sieve. After shaking the closed bottles where some polypropylene was present, slightly more of the agglomerates floated than in the previous example. After bubbling in nitrogen, for the samples with 0.4 g, 0.6 g and 1.0 g polypropylene present, all the agglomerates floated at the top of the water in the bottles. This indicates that the smaller polypropylene particles assisted the reduction in density of the agglomerates formed.
EXAMPLE 7 Agglomeration of hm-Sand and hm-MicrospheresSamples were prepared using varying proportions of 20/40 sand, hydrophobically modified with tridecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydro-octyl-triethoxysilane as in Example 3 and hydrophobically modified glass microspheres prepared as in Example 4. The amounts are given in the following table:
Each sample was mixed with 20 ml of deionised water in a bottle of about 30 ml capacity, thus leaving an air-filled headspace in the bottle of 10 ml or more. The bottle was closed and shaken vigorously so that the solids could be agglomerated with air from the headspace.
In the case of the sample 1, without microspheres, a single agglomerate was formed, just as with sample 1 of Example 5. For all samples with microspheres present some agglomerates sank to the bottom of the bottle but were less firmly settled than the agglomerate without microspheres and some agglomerates floated to the top of the water in the bottles.
Next nitrogen was bubbled into the bottles near the bottom of each one. Almost all of the agglomerates formed from sample4 with 75 vol % microspheres floated in the water. In the case of sample 5 with 1.0 g polypropylene present, all the agglomerates floated in the water.
This experiment was repeated with the modification that five drops of dodecane were added to the samples before nitrogen was bubbled into the bottom of each bottle. Yet again the sample without microspheres formed a single agglomerate which sank. The agglomerates from samples 3 and 4, with 50 vol % and 75 vol % microspheres, all floated. This indicates that a small amount of oil, occupying only a small volume fraction, increases the efficacy of gas in reducing the density of agglomerates.
EXAMPLE 8A procedure similar to the previous example was carried out, replacing the 20/40 sand with 70/140 sand, hydrophobically modified with heptadecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydro-decyl-triethoxysilane as in Example 3. The amounts of materials were as set out in the following table:
Each sample was mixed with 20 ml of deionised water in a bottle of about 30 ml capacity, thus leaving an air-filled headspace in the bottle of 10 ml or more. The bottle was closed and shaken vigorously so that the solids could be agglomerated with air from the headspace. As before, in the absence of glass microspheres the hm-sand forms an agglomerate which sinks in water. With 25 vol % microspheres, some agglomerates floated (a larger proportion than with 20/40 hm sand in the previous example) and with 50% microspheres almost all agglomerates floated.
A similar result was observed when nitrogen was bubbled into each bottle. The experiment was repeated with the modification that five drops of dodecane were added to the samples before nitrogen was bubbled into the bottom of each bottle. Yet again the sample without microspheres formed a single agglomerate which sank. With 25 vol % microspheres and again with 50 vol % microspheres all the agglomerates floated. This again indicates that a small amount of oil, occupying only a small volume fraction, increases the efficacy of gas in reducing the density of agglomerates.
As a control experiment, 0.5 g 70/14 hm-sand was mixed with 0.34 g of unmodified glass microspheres and 20 g deionised water. This quantity of microspheres amounts to 74 vol % of the solids. On shaking with air the unmodified glass microspheres did not agglomerate and floated at the surface of the water. The hm-sand formed an air agglomerate which sank to the base of the bottle.
APPLICATION OF THE INVENTIONTo illustrate and exemplify use of some embodiments of the method of this invention,
In the early stages of the fracturing job, the fluid does not contain particulate solid nor added nitrogen but its pressure is sufficiently great to initiate a fracture 36 in the formation 32. Subsequently the particulate materials and nitrogen are mixed, as described above, with the fluid which is being pumped in. Its pressure is sufficient to propagate the fracture 36 and as it does so it carries the suspended agglomerates 28 into the fracture 36. Because the agglomerates have a low density they do not settle out at the entrance to the fracture, but are carried deep into the fracture.
Claims
1. A wellbore fluid comprising an aqueous carrier liquid and first and second hydrophobic particulate materials suspended therein, where the first hydrophobic particles have a higher specific gravity than the second hydrophobic particles, the fluid also comprising a gas to wet the surface of the particles and bind them together as agglomerates.
2. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the first particles have a specific gravity of at least 1.8 and the second particles have a specific gravity of less than 1.5.
3. A fluid according to claim 2 wherein the second particles have a specific gravity of less than 1.0.
4. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein agglomerates of the first and second hydrophobic particles in the proportions present in the fluid, containing the gas in the maximum amount which the agglomerates can retain, have a density of 1.1 or less.
5. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the ratio of the first and second particles lies in a range from 4:1 to 1:4 by volume.
6. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the first hydrophobic particles have a higher strength to resist crushing than the second hydrophobic particles.
7. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the first particulate material comprises solid particles with a hydrophobic surface coating.
8. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the second particulate material comprises solid particles of hydrophobic material.
9. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the second particulate material comprises porous particles with a hydrophobic exterior.
10. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the second particulate material comprises hollow particles with a hydrophobic exterior.
11. A fluid according to claim 10 wherein the second particulate material comprises hollow glass particles with a hydrophobic surface coating.
12. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the aqueous carrier liquid is substantially free of viscosity-enhancing polymeric thickener and has a viscosity which is less than 15 centipoise when viscosities are measured at 20° C. and a shear rate of 100 sec−1.
13. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the aqueous carrier liquid is aqueous and contains one or more friction reducing additives in a total amount which is not greater than 1% by weight.
14. A fluid according to claim 1 further comprising a hydrophobic oil in an amount which is not more than 1% of the volume of the gas.
15. A fluid according to claim 1 wherein the gas is air or nitrogen.
Type: Application
Filed: May 8, 2013
Publication Date: Sep 19, 2013
Applicant: Schlumberger Technology Corporation (Sugar Land, TX)
Inventors: Trevor Lloyd Hughes (Cambridge), Evgeny Borisovich Barmatov (Cambridge), Jill F. Geddes (Cambridge), Michael J. Fuller (Cypress, TX), Bruno Drochon (Houston, TX), Sergey Makarychev-Mikhailov (Richmond, TX)
Application Number: 13/889,470
International Classification: C09K 8/66 (20060101);