Tuning the mechanical properties of organophilic clay dispersions: Particle composition and preshear history effects

Author:

Burger Nikolaos A.12ORCID,Loppinet Benoit1ORCID,Clarke Andrew3ORCID,Petekidis George12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. IESL-FORTH 1 , P.O. Box 1527, GR-711 10 Heraklion, Greece

2. Department of Materials Science and Technology, University of Crete 2 , Heraklion 70013, Greece

3. SLB, Schlumberger Cambridge Research Ltd. 3 , High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0EL, United Kingdom

Abstract

Clay minerals are abundant natural materials used widely in coatings, construction materials, ceramics, as well as being a component of drilling fluids. Here, we present the effect of steady and oscillatory preshear on organophilic modified clay gels in synthetic oil. Both platelet and needlelike particles are used as viscosifiers in drilling fluid formulations. For both particles, the plateau modulus exhibits a similar concentration dependence, GP∼c3.9, whereas the yield strain is γy∼c−1 for the platelets and γy∼c−1.7 for the needles. Mixtures of the two follow an intermediate behavior: at low concentrations, their elasticity and yield strain follows that of needle particles while at higher concentrations they exhibit a weaker power-law dependence. Furthermore, upon varying the preshear history, the gel viscoelastic properties can be significantly tuned. At lower (higher) clay concentrations, preshear at specific oscillatory strain amplitudes or steady shear rates may induce a hardening (softening) of the dispersions and, at all concentrations, a lowering of the shear strain. Hence, in needle dispersions preshear resulted in changes in the volume fraction dependence of the elastic modulus from GP∼c3.9 to GP∼c2.5 and of the yield strain fromγy∼c−1.7 to γy∼c−1. However, small angle x-ray scattering showed not much structural changes, within the q-range covered. Our findings indicate ways to design colloidal organoclay dispersions with a mechanical response that can be tuned at will.

Funder

European Union HORIZON-EUROPE

Publisher

Society of Rheology

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