Anti-accretion additives for drilling fluids

Earth boring – well treating – and oil field chemistry – Earth boring – Contains organic component

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C507S140000, C507S145000, C507S237000, C507S235000, C507S274000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06803346

ABSTRACT:

This invention relates to anti-accretion additives for drilling muds.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Bit-balling and cuttings accretion are problems encountered when drilling shales, particularly with water-based muds. Shale cuttings can adhere to each other and to the bottom hole assembly and cutting surfaces of the bit. Gradually a large plastic mass builds up which can block mud circulation and reduce rates of penetration. There is a “danger zone” of clay plasticity for balling and accretion, related to the water content of the clay or shale, which can be defined in terms of the Atterberg limits of soil mechanics. In the dry zone the clay has too little water to stick together and it is a friable and brittle solid. In the wet zone the material is essentially liquid like with very little inherent strength and can be washed away.—Intermediate to these zones, i.e., in the danger zone, the shale is a sticky plastic solid with greatly increased agglomeration properties and inherent strength.
When cuttings are exposed to conventional water-based muds they usually imbibe water and pass rapidly through these different zones, eventually dispersing. However recent advances in drilling fluid technology have developed highly inhibitive muds which appear to reduce the hydration of shale and in doing so maintain the cuttings in the danger or plastic zone contributing to increased accretion and bit-balling. Field experiences with glycol, phosphate and silicate muds in particular have shown accretion problems.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,639,715 describes additives for bit-balling prevention based on sulphonosuccinate chemistry.
Phosphorus based additives and compound have been used in the oilfield industry mainly for the purpose of enhancing oil recovery from production wells.
It is the object of the present invention to find alternatives to the known methods of preventing accretion.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention is an additive for drilling mud. The additive reduces the accretion and bit-balling tendencies of cuttings exposed to said muds. The additives are based on phosphonate chemistry, and are preferably of the general class:
wherein R, R′ and R″ are radicals exclusively containing H atoms or combinations of H, C, O or P atoms up to a maximum of 100 atoms.
In a more preferred embodiment, the additives are based on the formula
wherein R
1
, R
2
and R
3
are radicals exclusively containing H atoms or combinations of H, C, O or P atoms up to a maximum of 100 atoms.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the additives are containing not more than one phosphor atom.
In another preferred embodiment of the invention, the additive is a phosphor derivative of the succinic acid or short chain phosphorylated hydrocarbons.
Additives according to the invention are added to the drilling fluid at levels 0.1-10%, preferably 1-5%, weight by volume (% kg/liter). The drilling fluid itself may be oil based, though it is recognized that accretion tends to be less pronounced in drilling muds of this kind. Therefore, the preferred drilling fluid in accordance with the present invention is water based, even more preferably a reactive anionic based drilling fluid, such as silicate or phosphate based muds. Further additives as known in the art may be added to impart other desired properties to the mud system. Such known additives include viscosifying agents, filtrate reducing agenst, and weight adjusting agents. Other preferred additives are shale-swelling inhibitors, such as salts glycol-, silicate- or phosphate-based agents, or any combination thereof.
These and other features of the invention, preferred embodiments and variants thereof, and further advantages of the invention will become appreciated and understood by those skilled in the art from the detailed description below.


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