Variation in cement slurry characteristics of liquid additives
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Abstract
For nearly 50 years, admixtures of 50:50 Class H (or Class C): Pozzalon with 2% bentonite have functioned effectively worldwide as lightweight slurries for situations where heavier completion cements posed a risk of exceeding low fracture gradients in a particular wellbore. Pozzolanic materials are lightweight, and effectively combine with the calcium hydroxide that is liberated during the hydration of Portland cement. Historically, the 2% bentonite has been utilized to assist in the specification of relatively high water-to cement ratios, and therefore lighter slurry density, without the generation of excessive free water as the cement progresses though the setting process.
Though Bentonite has fulfilled the role quite well, it has two disadvantages: first, its presence in typical cement slurries reduces the effectiveness of a given concentration of most commercially available fluid loss additives. Second, while the 2% (by weight of cement) volume may seem of no consequence, the shipping costs associated with moving tons of the material over a long period of time can be significant.
A project was undertaken to determine whether or not there were other commercially available materials that could substitute for bentonite and yield improved slurry qualities at the same or reduced cost. Extensive testing of 50:50 slurries revealed that small quantities of sodium metasilicate (on the order of 0.5% by weight of cement) could effectively replace bentonite. Free water was controlled to the same degree, and a synergy with a commonly available fluid loss additive was discovered, allowing either a) less total fluid loss additive for a given fluid loss control tolerance, or, b) better fluid loss control for a given concentration of fluid loss additive.