Affiliation:
1. US Department of Energy National Energy Technology Laboratory and Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
2. US Department of Energy National Energy Technology Laboratory, AECOM
3. US Department of Energy National Energy Technology Laboratory
Abstract
Summary
Computed-tomography (CT) scanning has become a mainstay among scientists (Wildenschild and Sheppard 2013) because it enables nondestructive observation of material processes and formation in real time. Foamed cement is a high-strength, low-density material containing nitrogen gas, and is used to stabilize wellbore casings both onshore and offshore. In-situ foamed cement is subject to pressure changes because the slurry is pumped downhole and cures at depth. To correlate the influence of pressure to the gas-void size and the curing evolution of a foamed cement, two laboratory foamed cements were generated and CT scanned as they cured. One cement was generated following the American Petroleum Institute (API) industry standard API RP 10B-4 (2015) at atmospheric conditions using a blender, and the other cement was created using a foamed-cement generator (FCG) (resembling that of de Rozières and Ferrière 1991) to produce a sample at an elevated pressure. FCG-generated cement qualities (in the range of 20, 25, 30, 35, and 40%) were scanned at their cured state for comparison. From the CT-image time series and the single FCG scans, the volumetric void properties were characterized and compared. The time-series blender voids were an order of magnitude larger than the FCG voids, and void growth was stagnant after a curing period of 100 minutes, whereas the FCG voids gradually increased in volume after 100 minutes. The Hsü-Nadai plots (Brandon 1995) reveal that the FCG and blender voids are weakly prolate, and all FCG voids, regardless of generation quality, relax to a greater final-magnitude strain than the blender voids. These findings confirm that both the void size and the curing process are influenced by the pressure at which a foamed cement is generated.
Publisher
Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Cited by
9 articles.
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