RI 3645 Correlation Of Certain Properties Of Oil-Well Drilling-Mud Fluids With Particle-Size Distribution

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
George L. Gates C. P. Bowie
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
30
File Size:
1785 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1942

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION Experience in drilling oil and gas wells has shown that the voidance of blow-outs, twist-offs, fishing jobs, loss of circulation, and heaving and caving of shale formations into the drill hole depends largely on how well the drilling-mud fluid serves its purpose. A possible method for the control of the drilling fluids may be seen from a study of the relation between the particle-size distribution and some of the important drilling-fluid properties, such as the ability to build quickly a relatively impervious mud sheath on the wall of the hole in the porous formations penetrated by the bit during drilling operations. In a wartime economy, which urgently requires conservation of steel, proper functioning of the drilling fluid is particularly important because, as Parks 4/ has stated, intelligent use of good drilling fluids makes possible drilling of wells for thousands of feet in open holes without the necessity of setting protective strings of casing to control the movement of salt water, gas, and troublesome formations into the borehole; consequently, especially in deep wells, of proper drilling fluids materially reduces the need for casing and lowers the cost of drilling and completing the wells."
Citation

APA: George L. Gates C. P. Bowie  (1942)  RI 3645 Correlation Of Certain Properties Of Oil-Well Drilling-Mud Fluids With Particle-Size Distribution

MLA: George L. Gates C. P. Bowie RI 3645 Correlation Of Certain Properties Of Oil-Well Drilling-Mud Fluids With Particle-Size Distribution. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1942.

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