Crosslinking of Guar and Guar Derivatives

SPE Journal ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 12 (03) ◽  
pp. 316-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cuiyue Lei ◽  
Peter E. Clark

Summary Crosslinking of guar and guar derivatives has played a major role in improving stimulation of oil and gas wells. While crosslinking has been used for a number of years, many facets of crosslinked systems are still not well understood. Part of the problem is that the traditional methods of determining the properties of crosslinked fluids work well for obtaining the data necessary for treatment design, but yield little insight into the nature of the crosslinked system. A good example of this is found in the development of low polymer concentration crosslinked gels. These gels are important because they lower costs and help to minimize formation damage. In this paper, methods for predicting crosslinkability at low concentrations are reported. The polymer literature is filled with methods for characterizing polymer solutions almost none of which find wide use in the development of crosslinked fracturing fluids. Dawson et al. (2000) first reported that the concentration at which a polymer solution transitions from dilute to semidilute could be used as a method for determining the potential for low concentration crosslinking in guar or guar-derivative solutions. To test this assertion, we have conducted a series of experiments that not only shows that the dilute-semidilute transition concentration is an important indicator for the polymers used in this study, but also presents a framework for exploring the potential of other polymer systems. These experiments show conclusively that low-polymer concentration crosslinking is strongly related to the value of the critical overlap concentration, c*. Both the critical overlap concentration and the critical crosslinking concentration increase in the order guar-3 < CMG < CMHPG < guar < HPG. In addition, we show that the critical crosslinking concentration for the range of polymer-crosslinking systems studied is correlated to the critical overlap concentration (). A strong case is presented for the ability to crosslink at low concentrations is a strong function of the polymer type and a weak function of the crosslinker type. Introduction Water-soluble polymers have been used for a number of years as thickening agents for stimulation fluids. Crosslinking was developed to improve the performance of these materials without increasing polymer concentration. Over the years, a number of different crosslinking agents have been used with success. There are several good discussions of polymer and crosslinking systems available (Economides and Nolte 1989; Gidley et al. 1989), and it is not the purpose of this paper to expand these discussions. Rather, we will approach the problem of crosslinking from the prospective of the molecular or solution properties that control or influence crosslinking. When a water-soluble polymer is hydrated, the viscosity of the resulting solution increases as a function of concentration. Starting at low concentrations and building to high concentrations, the viscosity appears to exhibit an exponential increase. This phenomenon has been studied for a wide range of polymer—solvent systems and seems to be universal. Early work divided the viscosity—concentration curve into two regions (Menjivar 1986; Robinson et al. 1982) that were separated at a critical concentration labeled c*. As the understanding of polymer solution behavior progressed and more sensitive instruments and experimental techniques were developed, the solution behavior was determined to be more complex (Rubinstein and Colby 2003).

Author(s):  
Yushi Okamura ◽  
Tomohiro Kurose ◽  
Yasuo Kawaguchi

The phenomenon known as Toms effect can impart viscoelasticity to a water flow when a small amount of water-soluble polymer is added. The resulting viscoelastic fluid generates viscoelastic stress in the flow, dramatically reducing the turbulent stress. In this study, the spatial distribution of velocity is measured using a stereo-PIV method in the streamwise-spanwise plane parallel to the wall. Modification of the near wall turbulence by the polymer solution blown slowly from a permeable wall was investigated by analyzing the velocity distribution acquired by stereo-PIV measurements. Experimental results reveal that streamwise local mean velocity decreases as the dosed polymer concentration increases. The skewness factor at this height shifts from 0 to positive by adding the polymer, which indicates intensified turbulent coherent structure. Moreover, the spatial two-point correlation function calculated from streamwise velocity fluctuations maintains its high correlation with the streamwise direction. It is consistent with the finding from the instantaneous velocity distribution, which shows that the flection of low-speed streaks is suppressed. Next, it is revealed that the normal velocity at the wall for low-speed fluid is decreased dramatically by polymer additives. Moreover, applying the quadrant analysis, it is confirmed that ejection events are suppressed with decreasing normal velocity at the wall. Suppression of ejection motion affects to the turbulence in the log law layer. We conclude that this is one reason that turbulence is suppressed in a wide range of the shear layer by polymer additives present only in the vicinity of the wall.


Polymers ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 1702 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quan ◽  
Xie ◽  
Su ◽  
Feng

A new concept of thermoviscosifying polymers is proposed to address the problems about decreasing viscosity of polymer solution under high temperatures. However, existing thermoviscosifying polymers have complicated synthesis processes and high costs, and both of them restrict the wide practical applications of thermoviscosifying polymers. Although polyethers have the characteristics of thermal gelatinization, they just display thermoviscosifying behaviors only under extremely high concentrations (>15 wt %). Therefore, the graft copolymerization of the commercialized Pluronic F127 (PEO100-PPO65-PEO100) with acrylamide and 2-acrylamide-methylpropionic acid sodium salt was studied here. A series of graft modified polyether polymers were prepared and it was expected to get thermoviscosifying polymers with high molecular weights and low association temperatures. Several factors on thermoviscosifying behaviors were investigated, such as polymerization condition, polymer concentration, hydrophilic monomer, molecular structure and molecular weight. It was also proven that the apparent viscosity of polymer solution is influenced by polymer concentration, molecular weight of polymer, and content of anion groups.


SPE Journal ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 16 (01) ◽  
pp. 43-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillaume Dupuis ◽  
David Rousseau ◽  
René Tabary ◽  
Bruno Grassl

Summary The specific molecular structure of hydrophobically modified water-soluble polymers (HMWSPs), also called hydrophobically associative polymers, gives them interesting thickening and surface-adsorption abilities compared with classical water-soluble polymers (WSPs), which could be useful in polymer-flooding and well-treatment operations. However, their strong adsorption obviously can impair their injectivity, and, conversely, the shear sensitivity of their gels can be detrimental to well treatments. Determining for which improved-oil-recovery (IOR) application HMWSPs are best suited, therefore, remains difficult. The aim of this work is to bring new insight regarding the interaction mechanisms between HMWSPs and rock matrix and the consequences concerning their propagation in reservoirs. A consistent set of HMWSPs with sulfonated polyacrylamide backbones and alkyl hydrophobic side chains together with an equivalent WSP was synthesized and fully characterized. HMWSP and WSP solutions were then injected in model granular packs. As expected, with HMWSPs, high resistance factors (or mobility reductions, Rm) were observed. Yet, within the limit of the injected volumes, the effluent showed the same viscosity and polymer concentration as the injected solutions. A first significant outcome concerns the specificities of the Rm curves during HMWSP injections. Rm increases took place in two steps. The first corresponded to the propagation of the viscous front, as observed with WSP, whereas the second was markedly delayed, occurring several pore volumes (PV) after the breakthrough. This result is not compatible with the classical picture of multilayer adsorption of HMWSPs but suggests that injectivity is controlled solely by the adsorption of minor polymeric species. This hypothesis was confirmed by reinjecting the collected effluents into fresh cores; no second-step Rm increases were observed. Brine injections in HMWSP-treated cores revealed high residual resistance factors (or irreversible permeability reductions, Rk), which can be attributed to the presence of thick polymer-adsorbed layers on the pore surface. Nevertheless, Rk values strongly decreased when increasing the brine-flow rate. This second significant outcome shows that the adsorbed-layer thickness is shear-controlled. These new results should lead to proposing new adapted filtration and injection procedures for HMWSPs, aimed, in particular, at improving their injectivity.


2014 ◽  
Vol 628 ◽  
pp. 120-124
Author(s):  
Fa Yong Feng ◽  
Pei Zhi Yu

Brief introduction of research progresses of hydrophobically associating water soluble polymer, as well as a synthesis method of a hydrophobically associating water-soluble polymer P (AM/KAA/MAHB). Meanwhile the molecular structure is characterized, and the viscosity behavior of the ionic hydrophobic-associating polymer solution is analyzed. The influences of polymer concentration, temperature, shear rate and water salinity of the saline solution on apparent viscosity are discussed. The critical associating concentration of polymer in salt solutions and salt thickening effect are also studied. The results show that the polymer possesses obvious temperature resistance and salt tolerance compared with partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide polymer.


1997 ◽  
Vol 3 (S2) ◽  
pp. 605-606
Author(s):  
C. Bache ◽  
V. J. Anderson ◽  
R. A. L. Jones ◽  
A. M. Donald

Gelatin and dextran are two water soluble biopolymers of considerable importance in the food industry, both separately and in combination. A solution of gelatin and dextran (∼ 10% total polymer concentration) forms a single phase at high temperatures, and on cooling undergoes phase separation, which may occur simultaneously with the gelation of the gelatin. The exact phase distribution in the final microstructure is dependent on the initial polymer concentrations, and the relative rates of gelation and phase separation. Much work has been done on such systems in the past, using a variety of techniques. Most recently, optical microscopy and small angle light scattering (SALS) have been used to characterise the structure of this particular system, especially for systems at the critical concentration. However due to the constraints imposed by sample preparation, very little Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) has been carried out on such systems - freeze drying and the problems of obtaining contrast between the phases without staining make such experiments difficult and sometimes inconclusive.


1967 ◽  
Vol 71 (677) ◽  
pp. 381-383
Author(s):  
Y. Goren ◽  
P. O. Kane ◽  
J. F. Norbury

A technique has been devised for measuring the concentration of “Polyox” in dilute aqueous solutions. “Poly-ox”* is one of those polymers whose addition to water in low concentrations causes a reduction in skin friction (if the Reynolds number is sufficiently high) in turbulent flow through a pipe or boundary layer. (See, for example, ref. 1.) The analytical method is probably applicable to other polymers having this property, and it should be generally useful in this field of research. For example, in any experiment in which a polymer solution is injected at a point in a boundary layer, the method could be used to determine the distribution of polymer concentration at downstream sections. It is based on polarography, a well-established tool of chemical analysis of which an excellent account is given in ref. 2.


Molecules ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (23) ◽  
pp. 4371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fengming Lin ◽  
Hao-Ran Jia ◽  
Fu-Gen Wu

Glycol chitosan (GC), a water-soluble chitosan derivative with hydrophilic ethylene glycol branches, has both hydrophobic segments for the encapsulation of various drugs and reactive functional groups for facile chemical modifications. Over the past two decades, a variety of molecules have been physically encapsulated within or chemically conjugated with GC and its derivatives to construct a wide range of functional biomaterials. This review summarizes the recent advances of GC-based materials in cell surface labeling, multimodal tumor imaging, and encapsulation and delivery of drugs (including chemotherapeutics, photosensitizers, nucleic acids, and antimicrobial agents) for combating cancers and microbial infections. Besides, different strategies for GC modifications are also highlighted with the aim to shed light on how to endow GC and its derivatives with desirable properties for therapeutic purposes. In addition, we discuss both the promises and challenges of the GC-derived biomaterials.


Polymers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 2524
Author(s):  
Motahira Hashmi ◽  
Sana Ullah ◽  
Azeem Ullah ◽  
Muhammad Akmal ◽  
Yusuke Saito ◽  
...  

Cellulose is one of the most hydrophilic polymers with sufficient water holding capacity but it is unstable in aqueous conditions and it swells. Cellulose itself is not suitable for electrospun nanofibers’ formation due to high swelling, viscosity, and lower conductivity. Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) is also super hydrophilic polymer, however it has the same trend for nanofibers formation as that of cellulose. Due to the above-stated reasons, applications of CMC are quite limited in nanotechnology. In recent research, loading of CMC was optimized for electrospun tri-component polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), and carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) nanofibers aim at widening its area of applications. PVA is a water-soluble polymer with a wide range of applications in water filtration, biomedical, and environmental engineering, and with the advantage of easy process ability. However, it was observed that only PVA was not sufficient to produce PVA/CMC nanofibers via electrospinning. To increase spinnability of PVA/CMC nanofibers, PVP was selected as the best available option because of its higher conductivity and water solubility. Weight ratios of CMC and PVP were optimized to produce uniform nanofibers with continuous production as well. It was observed that at a weight ratio of PVP 12 and CMC 3 was at the highest possible loading to produce smooth nanofibers.


Polymers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 893
Author(s):  
Yifan Wei ◽  
Zhengquan Fu ◽  
Hao Zhao ◽  
Ruiqi Liang ◽  
Chengyu Wang ◽  
...  

Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) gel has a very wide range of applications in agriculture, military, industry, and other fields. As a widely used water-soluble polymer, PVA has good mechanical properties, excellent spinnability, good hydrophilicity, remarkable physical and chemical stability, good film formation, is non-polluting, and exhibits good natural degradation and biocompatibility. It is an ideal gel preparation material. Incorporation of rare-earth elements into PVA polymers can be used to prepare rare-earth luminescent gel materials. Results show that the luminescent efficiency of complexes is mainly related to their structure, ligand substituents, synergists, and the electronic configuration of doped rare-earth ions. Fluorescent gel films were prepared by adding europium, terbium, and europium/terbium co-doped into PVA, and their fluorescence properties were compared and analyzed. It was found that, in addition to the above factors, the sensitization of terbium to europium, and the fluorescence-quenching effect of hydroxyl groups, will influence the fluorescence properties. This has opened a new route for the application of rare-earth materials and may have value in the field of new materials.


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