RI 3249 Chemical Method For Removing Mud Sheaths In Oil Wells

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. C. Miller
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
23
File Size:
3436 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1934

Abstract

The removal of the mud sheaths that are deposited against the faces of productive oil sands during rotary drilling is one of the important problems confronting operators, especially in semidepleted fields where formation pressures are low. Unless the mud sheaths behind the perforated oil strings and liners are removed and the sands exposed, oil cannot enter the wells. Consequently much oil that otherwise might be produced from low-pressure sands is trapped and never recovered. Various types of perforation washers, down swabs, and agitators are used at present for breaking down the mud sheaths and removing the disintegrated clay particles from wells after the perforated Wipes have been inserted. Mechanical methods for removing mud sheaths are :quite satisfactory, but prompted by the request of certain .operators in the California oil fields Bureau of Mines engineers have conducted a series of laboratory tests with the view of developing a chemical method for removing mud sheaths in oil wells that will be applicable to field conditions. This report describes the laboratory work and deals generally with a chemical method for removing the mud sheath, cake, or plaster deposited against the face of oil sands in drilling wells end in wells that, on being shut in temporarily during periods of overproduction of oil, are conditioned for the shutdown .period by filling the well opposite the producing formations with mud fluid. The method described in this report was devised in the San Francisco laboratory of the Bureau of Mines and, as far as the writers have been able to determine, differs from any chemical method ever used in actual wells. The method proposes to add a small amount of calcium carbonate (preferably pulverized limestone) to the mud fluids before they are introduced into the wells so that the resultant mud sheaths will be susceptible to disintegration by acid solutions when it is desired to expose the faces of the oil sands in the wells.
Citation

APA: H. C. Miller  (1934)  RI 3249 Chemical Method For Removing Mud Sheaths In Oil Wells

MLA: H. C. Miller RI 3249 Chemical Method For Removing Mud Sheaths In Oil Wells. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1934.

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