scholarly journals Sealing performance and mechanical response of mud pump piston

Petroleum ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Zhang ◽  
W.J. Jiang ◽  
P. Zhu ◽  
T. Zheng
Author(s):  
Tasneem Pervez ◽  
Sayyad Zahid Qamar ◽  
Maaz Akhtar ◽  
Moosa Al Kharusi

AbstractIn the petroleum industry, packers refer to the components/products which are used to isolate one section in a formation from others, or to isolate the outer section of a production tubing from the inner section, which may be a casing or a liner or the wellbore itself. Mechanical packers are installed through some form of tubing movement. Permanent packers are low in cost and provide better seal. Retrievable packers have lower sealing capability but are re-usable after repair, and therefore expensive. More innovative packers made of swellable elastomers are rather new. These elastomers swell when they come in contact with different types of fluids (mostly water and oil). Like a casing, these new packers are lowered to the desired depth and allowed to swell before production or injection operations begin. Various studies have been published about the swelling and mechanical response of these elastomers. However, many questions remain about the sealing performance of swell packers, and their effectiveness in actual wellbores of rough and random profiles. This paper describes the design and development of an experimental unit for performance testing of a mix of inert and swelling elastomer seals under realistic well conditions. Actual swell packers and petroleum tubulars are housed in a concrete block that replicates open-hole and cased-hole wells through layers of varying roughness. This is a one-of-its-kind unit providing full-scale demonstration about the working of swell packers against outer casing or rock formation in a wellbore. It is also a complete testing apparatus to investigate the behavior of swell packers made of fast-swell and medium-swell elastomers, and how they seal off irregular boreholes. This work can provide basic understanding and visual corroboration to petroleum engineers and students, swelling elastomer application developers, and academic and research personnel.


Author(s):  
D. L. Rohr ◽  
S. S. Hecker

As part of a comprehensive study of microstructural and mechanical response of metals to uniaxial and biaxial deformations, the development of substructure in 1100 A1 has been studied over a range of plastic strain for two stress states.Specimens of 1100 aluminum annealed at 350 C were tested in uniaxial (UT) and balanced biaxial tension (BBT) at room temperature to different strain levels. The biaxial specimens were produced by the in-plane punch stretching technique. Areas of known strain levels were prepared for TEM by lapping followed by jet electropolishing. All specimens were examined in a JEOL 200B run at 150 and 200 kV within 24 to 36 hours after testing.The development of the substructure with deformation is shown in Fig. 1 for both stress states. Initial deformation produces dislocation tangles, which form cell walls by 10% uniaxial deformation, and start to recover to form subgrains by 25%. The results of several hundred measurements of cell/subgrain sizes by a linear intercept technique are presented in Table I.


Author(s):  
D. L. Callahan

Modern polishing, precision machining and microindentation techniques allow the processing and mechanical characterization of ceramics at nanometric scales and within entirely plastic deformation regimes. The mechanical response of most ceramics to such highly constrained contact is not predictable from macroscopic properties and the microstructural deformation patterns have proven difficult to characterize by the application of any individual technique. In this study, TEM techniques of contrast analysis and CBED are combined with stereographic analysis to construct a three-dimensional microstructure deformation map of the surface of a perfectly plastic microindentation on macroscopically brittle aluminum nitride.The bright field image in Figure 1 shows a lg Vickers microindentation contained within a single AlN grain far from any boundaries. High densities of dislocations are evident, particularly near facet edges but are not individually resolvable. The prominent bend contours also indicate the severity of plastic deformation. Figure 2 is a selected area diffraction pattern covering the entire indentation area.


2017 ◽  
Vol 59 (9) ◽  
pp. 774-778
Author(s):  
Zhiyong Tan ◽  
Weili Dong ◽  
Jie Mei ◽  
Jialin Liu ◽  
Jiayi Liu ◽  
...  

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