WO1994028087A1 - Invert drilling fluids - Google Patents

Invert drilling fluids Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1994028087A1
WO1994028087A1 PCT/US1994/005304 US9405304W WO9428087A1 WO 1994028087 A1 WO1994028087 A1 WO 1994028087A1 US 9405304 W US9405304 W US 9405304W WO 9428087 A1 WO9428087 A1 WO 9428087A1
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Prior art keywords
fluid
base oil
oil
olefins
linear alpha
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PCT/US1994/005304
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French (fr)
Inventor
Raymond Bruce Dawson
Joel Francis Carpenter
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Albemarle Corporation
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Application filed by Albemarle Corporation filed Critical Albemarle Corporation
Priority to AU69477/94A priority Critical patent/AU688770B2/en
Publication of WO1994028087A1 publication Critical patent/WO1994028087A1/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09KMATERIALS FOR MISCELLANEOUS APPLICATIONS, NOT PROVIDED FOR ELSEWHERE
    • C09K8/00Compositions for drilling of boreholes or wells; Compositions for treating boreholes or wells, e.g. for completion or for remedial operations
    • C09K8/02Well-drilling compositions
    • C09K8/32Non-aqueous well-drilling compositions, e.g. oil-based
    • C09K8/36Water-in-oil emulsions
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09KMATERIALS FOR MISCELLANEOUS APPLICATIONS, NOT PROVIDED FOR ELSEWHERE
    • C09K8/00Compositions for drilling of boreholes or wells; Compositions for treating boreholes or wells, e.g. for completion or for remedial operations
    • C09K8/02Well-drilling compositions
    • C09K8/32Non-aqueous well-drilling compositions, e.g. oil-based
    • C09K8/34Organic liquids

Definitions

  • the invention relates generally to invert drilling fluids and more specifically to environmentally friendly drilling fluids whose oil phase includes linear alpha-olefins having from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms.
  • invert drilling fluids oil based muds
  • oil based muds oil based muds
  • fatty acid esters and branched chain synthetic hydrocarbons such as polyalphaolefins.
  • Fatty acid ester based oils have excellent environmental properties, but drilling fluids made with these esters tend to have lower densities and are prone to hydrolytic instability.
  • Poly- alphaolefin based drilling fluids can be formulated to high densities, have good hydrolytic stability and low toxicity.
  • U.S. Patent 5,096,883 discloses the use of such branched chain synthetic, hydrogenated oils which have the advantage, over most natural petroleum base oils, of being considered “non-toxic” in that they pass the standard "Ninety-Six Hour Static Bioassay” test for mortality of mysid shrimp. The toxicity of natural oils is indicated to be due to the presence of aromatics and n-olefins in such oils.
  • an invert drilling fluid which comprises a water-in-oil emulsion which includes (a) at least 50 volume percent of a low toxicity base oil, and (b) at least one additive selected from the group consisting of emulsifiers, viscosifiers, weighing agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents, at least about 25 volume percent of the base oil content of the drilling fluid being one or more linear alpha-olefins having from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms.
  • Also provided is a method of lubricating a drill pipe when drilling a well which method comprises circulating an invert drilling fluid throughout a borehole while simultaneously rotating a string of drill pipe having a drill bit on its lower end in contact with the bottom of the base hole so as to reduce the friction between the pipe and the sides of the borehole and to remove cuttings from the borehole, wherein said invert drilling fluid comprises a water-in-oil emulsion which includes (a) at least 50 volume percent of a low toxicity base oil, and (b) at least one additive selected from the group consisting of emulsifiers, viscosifiers, weighing agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents, at least about 25 weight percent of the base oil content of the drilling fluid being one or more linear alpha- olefins having from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms.
  • Invert drilling fluids contain at least 50 volume %, and typically about 65 to 95 volume %, of a base oil as the continuous phase, no more than about 50 volume % of water, and various drilling fluid additives such as emulsifiers, viscosifiers, alkalinity control agents, filtration control agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents.
  • the base oils usually have kinematic viscosities of from about 0.4 to 6.0 mmVs at 100°C.
  • at least about 25 volume percent and, preferably, 75 volume percent or more of the base oil comprises one or more linear alpha-olefins having from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms and, preferably, from about 14 to 20 carbon atoms.
  • the preferred linear alpha-olefins and mixtures thereof are commercially available from Ethyl Corporation.
  • Such alpha-olefin products are derived from Ziegler chain growth and may contain up to about 40 wt. percent, based on the total olefin content, of vinylidene and/or linear internal olefins.
  • linear alpha-olefins has the advantage of lowering the viscosity of the mud to provide improved ' pumpability in use when compared to, for example, muds which use polyalphaolefin oils (PAO's) such as hydrogenated 1-decene dimer, whose kinematic viscosity of 1.8 mm 2 /s at 100°C is higher than optimum.
  • PAO's polyalphaolefin oils
  • the linear alpha-olefins also have better biodegradability compared to the PAO's which have a branched chain structure.
  • the linear alpha-olefins can be used either alone or in combination with other low-toxicity base oils such as, for example, low-toxicity mineral oils, esters and PAO's to improve the performance of the drilling fluid and/or lower costs.
  • LAO linear alpha-olefin
  • Table I The physical and environmental properties of some linear alpha-olefin (LAO) oils, and mixtures of the linear alpha-olefin oils with other low toxicity base oils, compared to two low toxicity mineral base oils and a PAO base oil, are reported in Table I wherein the percentages of each oil in the base oil are in volume percent.
  • the CEC (Coordinating European Council) L33 T82 protocol was developed to determine the persistence of 2-stroke outboard engine oil in aquatic environments. In recent years, results from this test have been applied more broadly. The test is fast becoming a standard for aquatic biodegradability for water insoluble materials. Note that this test is not a test of "ready biodegradability” but “comparative biodegradability. " These terms are tightly defined by regulatory bodies.
  • the CEC L33 T82 test procedure is summarized as follows: Test flasks, together with poisoned flasks, (each in triplicate) containing mineral medium, test oil and inoculum are incubated for 0 to 21 days. Flasks containing calibration materials in the place of the test oil are run in parallel. At the end of the incubation times, the contents of the flasks are subjected to sonic vibration, acidified, and extracted with CCl,, or R113. The extracts are then analyzed by Quantitative IR Spectroscopy, measuring the maximum absorption of the CH 3 -band at 2930 cm "1 . The biodegradability is expressed as the % difference in residual oil content between the test flasks and the respective poisoned flasks at day 21.
  • SPP Standard Paniculate Phase test procedure
  • Bioluminescent bacteria are exposed to progressively increasing concentrations of the test article.
  • the calculated concentration at which their light emissions are decreased by 50% is referred to as the EC50 or the Effective Concentration 50.
  • SPP is the preferred EPA method of preparing drilling fluids for toxicity assays.
  • the drilling fluid is diluted 1:9 in artificial sea water, mixed for 5 minutes, pH adjusted, and then allowed to settle.
  • the aqueous phase is treated as the undiluted test article.
  • Table II provides additional toxicity results for drilling muds, which contain 10% base oil in EPA's Generic Mud #7, according to the 96 hour LC 50 mysid shrimp acute toxicity test wherein the percentages of each oil in the base oil are in volume percent.
  • the NPDES National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
  • the NPDES National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
  • LC 50 > 30,000 ppm SPP, mysid shrimp, 96-hour acute toxicity. Drilling muds which meet this standard are considered to be non-toxic.
  • the mud tested is 10% Base Oil/90% EPA Generic Mud #7
  • the toxicities of comparison muds made with the mineral oil Clairsol 350 M oil, and linear alpha-olefin oils which contained material having less than 14 carbon atoms, e.g. Cj 2 C 26 , and C n C H mixtures failed to meet > 30,000 ppm SPP standard established by NPDES for ocean disposal.
  • the drilling fluid of the invention has a water phase of up to 50 volume percent, (preferably about 5 to 35 volume percent) which contains up to about 35 to 38 wt. % , (preferably about 20 to 35 wt. %) of sodium or calcium chloride.
  • the water in oil emulsion is formed by vigorously mixing the base oil and oil together with one or more emulsifying agents.
  • suitable emulsifiers include, for example, fatty acid soaps, preferably calcium soaps, polyamides, sulfonates, triglycerides, and the like.
  • the fatty acid soaps can be formed in situ by the addition of the desired fatty acid and a base, preferably lime.
  • the emulsifiers are generally used in amounts of from about 1 to 8 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid.
  • the drilling fluids also include, as known in the art, one or more additives such as viscosifiers, weighing agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents to enable the fluids to meet the needs of particular drilling operations.
  • additives function to keep cutting and debris in suspension, provide the required viscosity, density and additive wetting properties to the fluid, and prevent the loss of liquids from the fluid due to the migration of the liquids into the formations surrounding the well bore.
  • Clay and polymer viscosifiers such as, for example, bentonite and attapugite (which are sometimes reacted with quarternary ammonium salts), polyacrylates, cellulose derivatives, starches, and gums can be used in amounts of from about 0.5 to 5 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid.
  • the density of the drilling fluid can be increased by using weighing agents such as barite, galena, iron oxides, siderite and the like, to give densities ranging from about 950 to 2400 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid.
  • oil wetting agents such as lecithin or organic esters of polyhydric alcohols, can be added in amounts of up to about 4 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid.
  • Fluid loss agents such as organophilic humates made by reacting humic acid with amides of polyalkylene polyamines, act to coat the walls of the bore hole and are used in amounts of up to about 7 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid.
  • VERSAMUL ® is a blend of emulsifiers, wetting agents, gellants, and fluid stabilizing agents. It requires the addition of lime which affords a calcium soap. It is a primary additive in "conventional" invert mud systems.
  • 2 VERSAWET ® is a wetting agent, based on fatty acids.
  • VG-69 ® is a viscosifier and gelling agent. It is a bentonite-based organophilic clay.
  • a finished invert mud would also contain enough barite to give the density needed for a particular bore hole.
  • the characteristics of the formation through which the bore hole is drilled would also dictate whether the mud would require a fluid loss control agent.
  • the properties of the drilling fluids are reprinted in Table III below wherein the percentage of each oil in the base oil are in volume percent. Although the formulations were not optimized, the linear alpha-olefin containing oils formed stable emulsions, and each responded to the viscosifier.

Abstract

An environmentally friendly invert drilling fluid comprises a water-in-oil emulsion which includes (a) at least 50 volume percent of a low toxicity base oil, and (b) at least one additive selected from the group consisting of emulsifiers, viscosifiers, weighing agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents, at least about 25 weight percent of the base oil content of the drilling fluid being one or more linear alpha-olefins which have from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms.

Description

INVERT DRILLING FLUIDS
The invention relates generally to invert drilling fluids and more specifically to environmentally friendly drilling fluids whose oil phase includes linear alpha-olefins having from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms.
Historically, first crude oils, then diesel oils and, most recently, mineral oils have been used in formulating invert drilling fluids (oil based muds). Due to problems of toxicity and persistence which are associated with these oils, and which are of special concern in off-shore use, the industry is developing drilling fluids which use "pseudo-oils" for the oil phase. Examples of such oils are fatty acid esters and branched chain synthetic hydrocarbons such as polyalphaolefins. Fatty acid ester based oils have excellent environmental properties, but drilling fluids made with these esters tend to have lower densities and are prone to hydrolytic instability. Poly- alphaolefin based drilling fluids can be formulated to high densities, have good hydrolytic stability and low toxicity. They are, however, somewhat less biodegradable than esters, they are expensive and the fully weighted, high density fluids tend to be overly viscous. U.S. Patent 5,096,883 discloses the use of such branched chain synthetic, hydrogenated oils which have the advantage, over most natural petroleum base oils, of being considered "non-toxic" in that they pass the standard "Ninety-Six Hour Static Bioassay" test for mortality of mysid shrimp. The toxicity of natural oils is indicated to be due to the presence of aromatics and n-olefins in such oils.
We have now found that less expensive drilling fluids having excellent technical and environmental properties can be formulated by using linear alpha-olefins (n-olefins) as a part of or all of the base oil phase. Contrary to the suggestion in U.S. 5,096,883, the linear α-olefins having carbon numbers of C14 and above were found to have a sufficiently low toxicity so as to pass the mysid shrimp toxicity testing standards.
- l - In accordance with this invention there is provided an invert drilling fluid which comprises a water-in-oil emulsion which includes (a) at least 50 volume percent of a low toxicity base oil, and (b) at least one additive selected from the group consisting of emulsifiers, viscosifiers, weighing agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents, at least about 25 volume percent of the base oil content of the drilling fluid being one or more linear alpha-olefins having from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms.
Also provided is a method of lubricating a drill pipe when drilling a well, which method comprises circulating an invert drilling fluid throughout a borehole while simultaneously rotating a string of drill pipe having a drill bit on its lower end in contact with the bottom of the base hole so as to reduce the friction between the pipe and the sides of the borehole and to remove cuttings from the borehole, wherein said invert drilling fluid comprises a water-in-oil emulsion which includes (a) at least 50 volume percent of a low toxicity base oil, and (b) at least one additive selected from the group consisting of emulsifiers, viscosifiers, weighing agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents, at least about 25 weight percent of the base oil content of the drilling fluid being one or more linear alpha- olefins having from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms.
Invert drilling fluids contain at least 50 volume %, and typically about 65 to 95 volume %, of a base oil as the continuous phase, no more than about 50 volume % of water, and various drilling fluid additives such as emulsifiers, viscosifiers, alkalinity control agents, filtration control agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents. The base oils usually have kinematic viscosities of from about 0.4 to 6.0 mmVs at 100°C. According to this invention, at least about 25 volume percent and, preferably, 75 volume percent or more of the base oil comprises one or more linear alpha-olefins having from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms and, preferably, from about 14 to 20 carbon atoms. The preferred linear alpha-olefins and mixtures thereof, such as C,4, C14-,6, C14-24, and C16-18, are commercially available from Ethyl Corporation. Such alpha-olefin products are derived from Ziegler chain growth and may contain up to about 40 wt. percent, based on the total olefin content, of vinylidene and/or linear internal olefins.
Using the linear alpha-olefins has the advantage of lowering the viscosity of the mud to provide improved' pumpability in use when compared to, for example, muds which use polyalphaolefin oils (PAO's) such as hydrogenated 1-decene dimer, whose kinematic viscosity of 1.8 mm2/s at 100°C is higher than optimum. In contrast, the 100°C viscosities C,4 to C20 linear alpha-olefins range from about 0.85 to 2.85 mm2/s. The linear alpha-olefins also have better biodegradability compared to the PAO's which have a branched chain structure. The linear alpha-olefins can be used either alone or in combination with other low-toxicity base oils such as, for example, low-toxicity mineral oils, esters and PAO's to improve the performance of the drilling fluid and/or lower costs.
The physical and environmental properties of some linear alpha-olefin (LAO) oils, and mixtures of the linear alpha-olefin oils with other low toxicity base oils, compared to two low toxicity mineral base oils and a PAO base oil, are reported in Table I wherein the percentages of each oil in the base oil are in volume percent.
Figure imgf000006_0001
TABLE I
OIL
Property CI4 LAO1 25% C16.,g 50% C16.„ 75% C16.lg PAO34 Clairsol DF-16 Oil LAO2-75% LAO2-50% LAO2-25% 350M5 Oil PAO3 PAO3 PAO3
Vise. @ 40°C (mm2/s) 1.87 4.48 3.90 3.44 5.5 1.80 1.71
Vis. @ 100°C (mm2/s) 0.87 1.60 1.48 1.39 1.8 0.84 0.81
Pour Point (°C) -18 -18 -18 -9 < -65 -39 -42
I Flash Point (°C) 107 146 145 148 155 76 75 closed cup I
Biodegradability (%) 99 not tested not tested not tested 91 90 64 by CEC L33 T82
Toxicity:* NR7 NR NR NR NR 32,803 > 49,500 Microtox EC50 (SPP)
1 Typically about 95% wt C14 with 80 mol % minimum linear alpha-olefin
2 Typically about 55/35/10 % by wt C16/Clg/C2o with 60 mol % minimum linear alpha-olefin
3 ETHYLFLO® 162 polyalphaolefin from 1-decene
4 Properties are product specification
5 "Low-Toxicity" mineral oil
6 "Low-Toxicity" mineral oil
7 No toxic response detected
It can be seen from the data reported in Table I that the linear alpha- olefin oils have excellent toxicity and aquatic biodegradability properties. Their physical properties are suitable for drilling fluids and the flash points at comparable viscosities are superior to low-toxicity mineral oils.
The CEC (Coordinating European Council) L33 T82 protocol was developed to determine the persistence of 2-stroke outboard engine oil in aquatic environments. In recent years, results from this test have been applied more broadly. The test is fast becoming a standard for aquatic biodegradability for water insoluble materials. Note that this test is not a test of "ready biodegradability" but "comparative biodegradability. " These terms are tightly defined by regulatory bodies.
The CEC L33 T82 test procedure is summarized as follows: Test flasks, together with poisoned flasks, (each in triplicate) containing mineral medium, test oil and inoculum are incubated for 0 to 21 days. Flasks containing calibration materials in the place of the test oil are run in parallel. At the end of the incubation times, the contents of the flasks are subjected to sonic vibration, acidified, and extracted with CCl,, or R113. The extracts are then analyzed by Quantitative IR Spectroscopy, measuring the maximum absorption of the CH3-band at 2930 cm"1. The biodegradability is expressed as the % difference in residual oil content between the test flasks and the respective poisoned flasks at day 21.
The Microtox EC50 Standard Paniculate Phase (SPP) test procedure is summarized as follows: Bioluminescent bacteria are exposed to progressively increasing concentrations of the test article. The calculated concentration at which their light emissions are decreased by 50% is referred to as the EC50 or the Effective Concentration 50. SPP is the preferred EPA method of preparing drilling fluids for toxicity assays. The drilling fluid is diluted 1:9 in artificial sea water, mixed for 5 minutes, pH adjusted, and then allowed to settle. The aqueous phase is treated as the undiluted test article. Table II provides additional toxicity results for drilling muds, which contain 10% base oil in EPA's Generic Mud #7, according to the 96 hour LC50 mysid shrimp acute toxicity test wherein the percentages of each oil in the base oil are in volume percent.
The NPDES (National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System) standard for discharge into the Gulf of Mexico is an LC50 > 30,000 ppm (SPP, mysid shrimp, 96-hour acute toxicity). Drilling muds which meet this standard are considered to be non-toxic.
TABLE π
Figure imgf000008_0001
1 Typically about 3/28/28/23/18 wt. % C,02/C14/D16/C1g+ with 15 mol % linear α-olefin
2 Typically about 62/37/1 wt. % C12/C14/C16 with 87 mol % linear α-olefin
3 The mud tested is 10% Base Oil/90% EPA Generic Mud #7 As shown in the data presented in Table II, the toxicities of comparison muds made with the mineral oil Clairsol 350 M oil, and linear alpha-olefin oils which contained material having less than 14 carbon atoms, e.g. Cj2C26, and CnCH mixtures failed to meet > 30,000 ppm SPP standard established by NPDES for ocean disposal.
Besides the oil phase, the drilling fluid of the invention has a water phase of up to 50 volume percent, (preferably about 5 to 35 volume percent) which contains up to about 35 to 38 wt. % , (preferably about 20 to 35 wt. %) of sodium or calcium chloride. The water in oil emulsion is formed by vigorously mixing the base oil and oil together with one or more emulsifying agents. Various suitable emulsifiers are known in the art and include, for example, fatty acid soaps, preferably calcium soaps, polyamides, sulfonates, triglycerides, and the like. The fatty acid soaps can be formed in situ by the addition of the desired fatty acid and a base, preferably lime. The emulsifiers are generally used in amounts of from about 1 to 8 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid.
The drilling fluids also include, as known in the art, one or more additives such as viscosifiers, weighing agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents to enable the fluids to meet the needs of particular drilling operations. The additives function to keep cutting and debris in suspension, provide the required viscosity, density and additive wetting properties to the fluid, and prevent the loss of liquids from the fluid due to the migration of the liquids into the formations surrounding the well bore.
Clay and polymer viscosifiers such as, for example, bentonite and attapugite (which are sometimes reacted with quarternary ammonium salts), polyacrylates, cellulose derivatives, starches, and gums can be used in amounts of from about 0.5 to 5 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid. The density of the drilling fluid can be increased by using weighing agents such as barite, galena, iron oxides, siderite and the like, to give densities ranging from about 950 to 2400 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid.
In order to assist in keeping solid additives in suspension in the drilling fluid, oil wetting agents, such as lecithin or organic esters of polyhydric alcohols, can be added in amounts of up to about 4 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid.
Fluid loss agents, such as organophilic humates made by reacting humic acid with amides of polyalkylene polyamines, act to coat the walls of the bore hole and are used in amounts of up to about 7 kilograms per cubic meter of drilling fluid.
The invention is further illustrated by, but is not intended to be limited to, the following example.
Example 1
Four oil base (invert mud) drilling fluids were formulated using various linear alpha-olefin (LAO) containing base oils according to the following formulation:
Base Oil, mL 262
30% aqueous CaCl2, mL 88
VERSAMUL®, g emulsifier 3
VERSAWET®, g wetting agent 2'4 4 VG-69®, g viscosifier 3A 5
Lime, g 10
1 VERSAMUL® is a blend of emulsifiers, wetting agents, gellants, and fluid stabilizing agents. It requires the addition of lime which affords a calcium soap. It is a primary additive in "conventional" invert mud systems. 2 VERSAWET® is a wetting agent, based on fatty acids.
3 VG-69® is a viscosifier and gelling agent. It is a bentonite-based organophilic clay.
Products of MI Drilling Fluids Co.
A finished invert mud would also contain enough barite to give the density needed for a particular bore hole. The characteristics of the formation through which the bore hole is drilled would also dictate whether the mud would require a fluid loss control agent.
The properties of the drilling fluids are reprinted in Table III below wherein the percentage of each oil in the base oil are in volume percent. Although the formulations were not optimized, the linear alpha-olefin containing oils formed stable emulsions, and each responded to the viscosifier.
Figure imgf000012_0001
TABLE III
Testing of Simple Invert Muds Formulated with Linear Alpha-Olefin (LAO) Oils
FLUID C,4LAO- 75% PAO3 50% PAO3 25% PAO3 25% CIW, LAO2 50% C16.„ LAO2 75% C16-18 LAO2
Hot Rolled? I4 HR5 I HR5 I HR5 I HR5
600 rpm Dial Reading6 10 11 20 25 21 22 19 20
300 rpm Dial Reading 6 6 11 13 11 11.5 10 10.5
200 rpm Dial Reading 4 4 5.25 8.5 8 8 7.5 7.5
100 rpm Dial Reading 2.25 2.25 3.75 4.75 4 4 3.5 3.75
6 rpm Dial Reading 0.75 0.75 0.5 1 0.5 0.75 0.75 0.75 o
I 3 rpm Dial Reading 0.75 0.75 0.5 0.75 0.5 0.75 0.75 0.75
Plastic Viscosity, cp 4 5 9 12 10 10.5 9 9.5
Yield Point, lb/ 100 ft2 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1
Gel Strength, lb/100 ft2 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 0/1 1/1 1/1
Electrical Stability, V 173 275 281 272 244 230 228 291
1 Typically about 95% wt C14 with 80 mol % minimum linear alpha-olefin
2 Typically about 55/35/10 % by wt C,6/Clg/C2o with 60 mol % minimum linear alpha-olefin
3 ETHYLFLO® 162 polyalphaolefin from 1-decene
4 Initial value before hot rolling
5 Hot rolled at 225°F (107.2°C for 16 hours)
6 Fann Viscometer dial reading

Claims

What Is Claimed Is:
1. An invert drilling fluid which comprises a water-in-oil emulsion which includes (a) at least 50 volume percent of a low toxicity base oil, and (b) at least one additive selected from the group consisting of emulsifiers, viscosifiers, weighing agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents, at least about 25 volume percent of the base oil content of the drilling fluid being one or more linear alpha- olefins which have from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms.
2. The fluid of claim 1 wherein said linear alpha-olefins have from about 16 to 20 carbon atoms and at least about 75 volume percent of the base oil content is one or more linear alpha-olefins.
3. The fluid of claim 1 in which the base oil comprises one or more linear alpha-olefins and a hydrogenated polyalphaolefin oil.
4. The fluid of claim 1 wherein said fluid contains from about 65 to 95 volume % base oil and said base oil has a kinematic viscosity at 100°C of from about 0.4 to 6.0 mm2/s at 100°C.
5. The fluid of claim 1 wherein said fluid contains from about 1 to 8 kilograms per cubic meter of fluid of an emulsifier.
6. A method of lubricating a drill pipe when drilling a well, which method comprises circulating an invert drilling fluid throughout a borehole while simultaneously rotating a string of drill pipe having a drill bit on its lower end in contact with the bottom of the base hole so as to reduce the -friction between the pipe and the sides of the borehole and to remove cuttings from the borehole, wherein said invert drilling fluid comprises a water-in-oil emulsion which includes (a) at least 50 volume percent of a low toxicity base oil, and (b) at least one additive selected from the group consisting of emulsifiers, viscosifiers, weighing agents, oil wetting agents and fluid loss preventing agents, at least about 25 volume percent of the base oil content of the drilling fluid being one or more linear alpha-olefins which have from about 14 to 30 carbon atoms.
7. The method of claim 68 wherein said linear alpha-olefins have from about 16 to 20 carbon atoms and at least about 75 volume percent of the base oil content is one or more linear alpha-olefins.
8. The fluid of claim 6 in which the base oil comprises one or more linear alpha-olefins and a hydrogenated polyalphaolefin oil.
9. The fluid of claim 6 wherein said fluid contains from about 65 to 95 volume % base oil and said base oil has a kinematic viscosity at 100°C of from about 0.4 to 6.0 mm2/s at 100°C.
10. The fluid of claim 6 wherein said fluid contains from about 1 to 8 kilograms per cubic meter of fluid of an emulsifier.
PCT/US1994/005304 1993-06-01 1994-05-11 Invert drilling fluids WO1994028087A1 (en)

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US08/069,468 1993-06-01

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NO (1) NO305522B1 (en)
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US5627143A (en) * 1993-09-01 1997-05-06 Dowell Schlumberger Incorporated Wellbore fluid
US6022833A (en) * 1996-10-30 2000-02-08 Henkel Kommanditgesellschaft Auf Aktien Multicomponent mixtures for use in geological exploration

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MY111305A (en) * 1993-09-01 1999-10-30 Sofitech Nv Wellbore fluid.
US5498596A (en) * 1993-09-29 1996-03-12 Mobil Oil Corporation Non toxic, biodegradable well fluids
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