1. Introduction
With the increase of drilling depth in oil and gas exploration, the failure of downhole drilling tools due to the wear, corrosion and erosion by drilling fluid has become a challenge that cannot be ignored [
1,
2], as they will shorten the service life of drilling tools and increase drilling costs [
3,
4,
5,
6]. Among them, one of the main ways of wear is caused by abrasive wear against solid particles contained in the drilling fluid [
7,
8,
9,
10]. Therefore, investigating the wear mechanism of drilling tool steel exposed to various particles in the drilling fluid is essential to predict the life of the tools.
During real drilling operations, the solid particles in the mud mainly include talc, dolomite, fluorite and quartz [
11,
12,
13]. The hardness of the first three particles is lower (
HA < 210), while that of quartz is greater than 1000. Therefore, the working environment of the drilling tools is an abrasive one made up of a mixture of particles of different hardness.
In the study on the relationship between abrasive hardness and wear mechanism, Tabor [
14] firstly verified that when there is a hardness difference of about 20% between adjacent minerals the “ability to scratch” will occur. Khruschov [
15] established a correlation between the wear resistance and physical properties of materials by abrasive wear tests against fixed abrasive grains on technically pure metals, heat-treated steels, cold work hardened materials, hard wear-resistant materials and minerals. Gundlach and Parks [
16] studied the influence of abrasive hardness on the wear resistance of high chromium cast irons, indicating that their wear rate increased with increasing hardness of the abrasive. Kato [
17] studied experimentally the abrasive wear mechanism of metals, reporting that the microstructure of metals caused by abrasive wear is not only related to the hardness of the abrasive, but also to the strain rate of the metals. Zum Gahr [
18] found that in addition to the hardness of abrasive particles, the capability of deformation or the fracture toughness of the wearing material is also very important for the wear mechanism. Torrance [
19] theoretically improved the mechanics models of abrasive process, providing a means of linking the different effects of various parameters together to determine the wear mechanism of the workpiece under particular, complex conditions. Mello et al. [
20] used SiO
2 fine abrasives to conduct free ball micro-abrasion tests and analyzed the effect of micro-structural parameters (eutectic carbides and matrix hardness) on the micro-abrasive wear of multi-component ferrous alloys abraded by soft, fine abrasive particles, revealing that the wear coefficient was neither influenced by the nature and amount of eutectic carbides nor by the hardness of the matrix, and the removal of matrix material due to abrasion with fine silica particles would decrease the mechanical supporting of the carbides, which caused a gradual fracture and their pull-out. Pintaude [
21] tested two approaches using elastic-plastic models and three tribological pairs with similar ratios of abrasive hardness to the worn material hardness to gain an understanding of the hardness differential required for abrasion, theoretically confirming the empirical result that the abrasive must be at least 1.2 times harder than the worn surface if it is to produce a scratch. Pintaude et al. [
22] also applied a pin-on-disk test apparatus to investigate the abrasive wear behavior of 1070 and 52,100 steels as well as ductile and white cast irons sliding with glass or alumina as the abrasive materials, revealing that the microcutting mechanism of wear prevailed together with friction coefficients larger than 0.4 when the relatively hard abrasive alumina was used; while the relatively soft abrasive glass was tested, indentation of abrasive particles followed by its fragmentation, and a creation of a thin deformed layer were the main damage mechanisms, with the friction coefficient lying below 0.4. Moreover, Piazzetta et al. [
23] proposed a new approach based on scanning electron microscopy to identify the wear mechanisms acting on the Cerchar stylus (AISI A2 tool steel) during tests, indicating that the wear mechanisms could be classified into two extremes (mild and severe) with a transition region between them. The mild regime could be characterized by the polishing action of rocks (Cerchar abrasiveness index ≤ 1.8). The severe regime could be characterized by micro-cutting with extensive plastic deformation (Cerchar abrasiveness index ≥ 3.1). However, all these studies were carried out under dry conditions.
More recently, Rong et al. [
24] studied the relationship between the abrasive wear behavior of hard metal YG8B and the concentration of coarse abrasive SiO
2, Al
2O
3 and SiC in their slurry, indicating that the volume loss of hard metals was positively correlated with the hardness of abrasives, their concentration in slurry and the duration of testing under the same condition, respectively, but the wear rate was positively correlated with the hardness of abrasives and their concentration in slurry, which changed in different ways with sliding distance while different abrasive slurries were used. Ren et al. [
25,
26] studied the wear behaviors of TiCN cermets as well as ultra-fine WC-Co hard metal RX8UF in slurries with the coarse-angle abrasives of silicon carbide, alumina and silica through using a modified ASTM B611 wet sand rubber edge wheel, revealing that the wear rate increased with increasing abrasive hardness and their mass fraction. With extending sliding distance, under lower abrasive fraction, the wear rate increased very slowly, but under higher abrasive fraction it initially increased rapidly, then became steady and even dropped down. Cai et al. [
27] used a modified ASTM B611 rubber ring wet grinding test system to study the wear behavior of 4145H steel in a slurry containing SiO
2, Al
2O
3 and SiC, respectively, showing that both the wear volume and wear rate of the steel increased with the concentration of abrasive particles. However, Cai et al. only selected abrasive particles with much higher hardness than that of the steel and ignored the effect of a large number of soft abrasive particles (such as talc, dolomite and fluorite) contained in the real drilling slurry.
Therefore, the purpose of this study was to simulate the wear behavior of 4145H drilling tool steel in abrasive slurrys through laboratory experiments to explore the performance of drilling tools during oil and gas drilling, so as to find the ways to reduce the wear of drilling tools. On the basis of our previous work [
27], a modified ASTM B611 wet sand rubber rimmed wheel test system was used to conduct the tests on 4145H drilling steel in water-based slurry with different abrasive hardness. The wear rate and mechanism were investigated systematically by measuring the wear loss of the samples and examining the surface morphology and microstructure of the abraded 4145H steel under different experimental conditions, hoping that the wear and anti-wear performance of the drilling tools in actual working conditions could be reasonably estimated. This study might provide a guide for reducing the wear of 4145H steel drilling tools in actual engineering, extending the service life of drilling tool and reducing downhole accidents.