Composite Hydration Process of Clay Minerals Simulating Mineral Clay Components and Influence Mechanism of Cations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Instruments
2.1. Experimental Materials
2.2. Experimental Instruments
3. Experimental Methods
- (1)
- Preparation of mud cake. We selected montmorillonite, illite, kaolinite, chlorite, and bentonite samples, weighed 10 g of each into the press container, applied 10 MPa pressure to the samples, held the pressure for 5 min to press them into mud cakes, and then used vernier calipers to record their initial diameter and height. The prepared mud cake is shown in Figure 1.
- (2)
- Hydration swelling test. The pressed mud cake was placed in a measuring cylinder and immersed in water at room temperature under static conditions. We observed the experimental phenomenon and recorded the expansion height of the cake at different times with vernier calipers.
- (3)
- Hydration and dispersion experiment. ① The pressed mud cakes were put into petri dishes, then poured into distilled water and soaked at room temperature under static conditions. ② We observed the phenomenon, and vernier calipers were used to record the dispersion of the collapsed diameter of mud cake after different soaking times. The measured dispersion diameter values are the maximum diameter.
- (4)
- Hydration and dispersion experiments of different components. ① We placed the mud cakes into the Petri dishes with water, and soaked them under the condition of standing at room temperature. ② We observed the phenomenon and recorded the mud cake dispersion collapse diameter with vernier calipers. The dispersion of the collapsed diameter of the cake was measured at different soaking times.The measured dispersion diameter value has two values, in that the inner diameter of the mud cake is the diameter of the dispersion collapse part in the middle of the mud cake in water, and the outer diameter of the mud cake is the maximum diameter of the overall dispersion of the mud cake. Thus, the difference between the inner diameter and the outer diameter of the mud cake is the difference between the values of the outer diameter and the inner diameter, and a larger value indicates stronger dispersion of the mud cake.
- (5)
- Hydration experiments of different cation solutions. ① We used distilled water to prepare a 10% concentration of NaCl, CaCl2, and KCl solution. ② The pressed mud cake was put into the Petri dish, then poured into different solutions, soaked at room temperature under static conditions after we had observed the phenomenon and used vernier calipers to measure the height of the expansion of the mud cake at different soaking times and the diameter of mud cake dispersion collapse. The measured values of dispersion diameter are the maximum diameter.
- (6)
- A CST test. In this experiment, the effect of different metal ion concentrations and types on CST was measured to evaluate its dispersibility. This index describes the dispersion ability of mud, which can be used to evaluate the ability of mud to inhibit dispersion, the anti-swelling ability of drill fluid, the ability of drill fluid to inhibit hydration and dispersion, and to optimize the formulation of working fluid into the well, such as dosage and ratio, type of treatment agent, etc. It is also a new method to analyze and evaluate the classification of shale. Given that the hydration properties of bentonite and montmorillonite are very similar, the effect of different metal ions on their dispersion performance was further investigated using sodium-based bentonite, and the base slurry was formulated to test its capillary absorption time (CST). The smaller the CST, the better the inhibition of montmorillonite dispersion and, vice versa, the worse the inhibition of its dewatering performance. The experimental steps are as follows:
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Trend of Hydration and Swelling of Clay Minerals
4.2. Hydration Dispersion of Single Clay Minerals
4.3. Effect of the Clay Fraction of Simulated Minerals on Hydration
4.4. Effect of Cations on the Hydration of Clay Minerals
4.4.1. Hydration Dispersion Effect
4.4.2. CST Capillary Absorption Time
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Clay minerals in contact with water reach the early stage of hydration faster when the hydration is gradually stabilized to a certain extent. The hydration of sodium bentonite and montmorillonite is the strongest.
- (2)
- Different clay minerals show different states after encountering water. Of these, montmorillonite and illite hydration are the most obvious, and montmorillonite mainly shows hydration swelling. Illite has no water absorption and swelling but mainly shows dispersion. Kaolinite collapses very easily after encountering water, and chlorite has almost no hydration swelling.
- (3)
- Through qualitative and quantitative analysis of water absorption processes of different clay minerals, and different mineral components, the changes in the water absorption states of clay minerals and their influence laws were obtained. By comparing the difference between illite and montmorillonite content, it is found that illite and montmorillonite hydration show different states. When illite content is high, mainly for hydration dispersion, it is not easily swollen by hydration. On the other hand, when montmorillonite content is higher, the degree of hydration is greater, and it is mainly affected by the swelling of hydration.
- (4)
- Cations in solution have a certain inhibitory effect on the hydration of clay minerals, and different cations have different degrees of inhibition. The inhibition effect of Ca2+ is best when the concentration of cations is low, the inhibition effect of Na+ is best when the concentration of solution reaches 9%, and the inhibition effect of K+ is best when the concentration is greater.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Material Name | Material Grade | Manufacturers |
---|---|---|
NaCl | Analytical purity | China Jingzhou Jiahua Technology Co., Ltd., Jingzhou, China |
CaCl2 | Analytical purity | China Jingzhou Jiahua Technology Co., Ltd., Jingzhou, China |
KCl | Analytical purity | China Jingzhou Jiahua Technology Co., Ltd., Jingzhou, China |
Montmorillonite | Analytical purity | Shuolong Mineral Processing Plant, Lingshou, China |
Illite | Analytical purity | Shuolong Mineral Processing Plant, Lingshou, China |
Kaolinite | Analytical purity | Shuolong Mineral Processing Plant, Lingshou, China |
Chlorite | Analytical purity | Shuolong Mineral Processing Plant, Lingshou, China |
Sodium bentonite | Analytical purity | Shuolong Mineral Processing Plant, Lingshou, China |
Distilled water | Analytical purity | Shuolong Mineral Processing Plant, Lingshou, China |
Instrument Name | Model | Manufacturers |
---|---|---|
Electronic scale | FA | Qingdao Jiaonan Analytical Instrument Factory, Qingdao, China |
Liquid pressure machine | YLJ600 | Qingdao Haitongda Special Instrument Co., Qingdao, China |
Constant speed stirrer | GJS-B12K | Qingdao Paradigma Petroleum Machinery Manufacturing Co., Qingdao, China |
CST capillary absorption time tester | Fann440 | Fann Instrument Company, Houston, TX, USA |
Mud Cake Number | Clay Mineral Composition (%) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Montmorillonite | Illite | Kaolinite | Chlorite | |
ZF-1 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 |
ZF-2 | 30 | 20 | 25 | 25 |
ZF-3 | 40 | 10 | 25 | 25 |
ZF-4 | 50 | 0 | 25 | 25 |
ZF-5 | 20 | 30 | 25 | 25 |
ZF-6 | 10 | 40 | 25 | 25 |
ZF-7 | 0 | 50 | 25 | 25 |
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Siyao, H.; Mingbiao, X.; Peng, X.; Yu, Z.; Xinying, W. Composite Hydration Process of Clay Minerals Simulating Mineral Clay Components and Influence Mechanism of Cations. Energies 2022, 15, 7550. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15207550
Siyao H, Mingbiao X, Peng X, Yu Z, Xinying W. Composite Hydration Process of Clay Minerals Simulating Mineral Clay Components and Influence Mechanism of Cations. Energies. 2022; 15(20):7550. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15207550
Chicago/Turabian StyleSiyao, Huang, Xu Mingbiao, Xu Peng, Zhang Yu, and Wang Xinying. 2022. "Composite Hydration Process of Clay Minerals Simulating Mineral Clay Components and Influence Mechanism of Cations" Energies 15, no. 20: 7550. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15207550
APA StyleSiyao, H., Mingbiao, X., Peng, X., Yu, Z., & Xinying, W. (2022). Composite Hydration Process of Clay Minerals Simulating Mineral Clay Components and Influence Mechanism of Cations. Energies, 15(20), 7550. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15207550