Login | Register


Engineering News

Latest news of interest to engineers. Sourced from GlobalSpec's Engineering News

Previous in Blog: Exploding Star Sets Distance Record   Next in Blog: KR Tools Autoloader Screwdriver Changes Bits Automatically
Close

Comments Format:






Close

Subscribe to Discussion:

CR4 allows you to "subscribe" to a discussion
so that you can be notified of new comments to
the discussion via email.

Close

Rating Vote:







Graphene Additive for Drilling Fluids

Posted November 03, 2009 10:22 AM

From The Engineer:

Rice University and Houston-based M-I SWACO, the world's largest producer of drilling fluids for the petrochemical industry, aim to develop a graphene additive that will improve the productivity of wells. Rice chemistry professor James Tour's lab will work with M-I SWACO's researchers to optimise the effectiveness of nanoscale graphene additives to drilling fluids, also known as muds, in a two-year $450,000 (£275,780) effort. Water or oil-based muds are typically forced downhole through a drill to keep the drillhead clean and to remove cuttings as the fluid streams back up toward the surface. But the fluids themselves can clog pores in the shaft through which oil should flow. The nanoscaled graphene additive would be forced by the fluid's own pressure to form a thin filter cake on the shaft wall preventing muds from clogging the pores.

Read the whole article


Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.

Previous in Blog: Exploding Star Sets Distance Record   Next in Blog: KR Tools Autoloader Screwdriver Changes Bits Automatically
You might be interested in: Base Oils, Oil Additives and Specialty Fluids, Filtration Media and Elements, Hydraulic Filters