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Characterizing returning polymers in hydraulic-fracturing flowback and produced water: Implications for colloid formation (includes associated erratum)

Faculty Advisor

Date

2021

Keywords

drilling fluid chemistry, shale gas, drilling fluid property, proppant, complex reservoir, drilling fluid formulation, upstream oil & gas, drilling fluid selection and formulation, drilling fluids and materials, fracturing fluid

Abstract (summary)

Partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide (PHPA) friction reducer was investigated in produced water from hydraulically fractured wells in the Duvernay and Montney Formations of western Canada. Produced water from systems that used nonencapsulated breaker had little residual solids (<0.3 g/L) and high degrees of hydrolysis, as shown by Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Where an encapsulated breaker was used, more colloidal solids (1.1–2.2 g/L) were found with lower degrees of hydrolysis. In this system, the molecular weight (MW) of polymers was investigated, which decreased to <2% of the original weight within 1 hour of flowback. This was accompanied by slow hydrolysis and an increase in methine over methylene groups. Increased polymer-fragment concentrations were found to be correlated with a higher abundance of metal-carrying colloidal phases. This can lead to problems such as higher heavy-metal mobility in the case of produced-water spills and can cause membrane fouling during produced-water recycling and reuse.

Publication Information

Von Gunten, K., Snihur, K. N., McKay, R., Kenney, J. P. L., Serpe, M., Alessi, D. S. (2021). Characterizing returning polymers in hydraulic-fracturing flowback and produced water: Implications for colloid formation (includes associated erratum). SPE Journal, 26(2), 563-590. https://doi.org/10.2118/203848-PA

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

English

Rights

All Rights Reserved