Solids control: Difference between revisions
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* [[Mud Gun]] |
* [[Mud Gun]] |
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* [[Mud tank]] |
* [[Mud tank]] |
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==Solids control providers== |
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There are many providers of solids control equipment and services for the US oilfield industry, including: |
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*[[National Oilwell Varco]] |
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*[[M-I SWACO]] |
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*[[Baker Hughes]] |
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*[[Stage 3 Separation]] |
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*[[Derrick Equipment]] |
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*[[JFY Solid Control]] |
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*[[GN Solids Control]] |
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You could contact henry[@]machine-export.com for more information. |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 08:05, 10 December 2012
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Solids control is a technique used in drilling rig to separate the solids in the drilling fluids that are crushed by the drill bits and carried out of the well surface. Normally solid control system is consist of five stages, including mud tank, shale shaker, vacuum degasser, desander, desilter, centrifuge. Shale shaker is used to separate the big solids with diameter above 75μm, and 45~74μm for desander, and 15~44μm for desilter. Sometimes desander & desilter are combined as high efficient mud cleaner. When air enters into the drilling fluids, vacuum degasser is used to separate the air. If no air in the mud, the degasser would work as a big agitator. All these equipments are mounted on the top of the mud tank. After separating the solids, the clean mud would be pumped into the borehole again.
Development history
Drilling fluid maintenance cost, clean up, and disposal cost as well as the overall cost of boring can be reduced dramatically when proper solids control techniques are utilized. These facts were recognized in the oil industry in the late 19th century when open earthen pits were used to separate the cuttings from the borehole. This was accomplished by a series of weirs and settling pits that allowed the solids to naturally settle out by using gravity. The clean mud then flowed into a suction pit to be re-pumped down the hole. This was the first solids control technique ever used.
The next innovation in solids control came when the shale shaker was introduced in the early 1930s for the oil industry. The shale shakers were derived from technology used in the mining industry. The shale shaker remains today the primary piece of solids control equipment utilized in the industry.
Another machine borrowed from the mining industry in the 1930s was the cone classifier or hydrocyclone. The basic principle of this device involves the centripetal forces brought about by the high velocity of the drilling fluid spinning in the cone, forcing the larger and heavier solids to settle outward toward the cyclone wall and downward toward the underflow solids discharge. Together with the shale shaker, hydrocyclones have become an integral part of today’s solid control system. In a addition to shakers and hydrocyclones, the use of a high-speed centrifuge has significantly contributed to the ability of a drilling operation to reduce the amount of mud to be built and diesel/barite additions to maintain optimum low and high gravity solids proportions.
Recent advances in solids control include the creation of a closed loop system which allows for increased environmental control and reduction in the potential for spills of drilling fluids. Several US states have either passed or are considering the implementation of closed loop systems, particularly for hydro-fracturing operations.[1]
Equipment
- Fluids processing system
- Shale shaker
- Mud cleaner
- Desander
- Desilter
- Centrifuge
- Degasser
- Mud Gas Separator
- Centrifugal pump
- Jet mud mixer
- Mud agitator
- Electric ignition device
- Mud Gun
- Mud tank
Solids control providers
There are many providers of solids control equipment and services for the US oilfield industry, including:
- National Oilwell Varco
- M-I SWACO
- Baker Hughes
- Stage 3 Separation
- Derrick Equipment
- JFY Solid Control
- GN Solids Control
You could contact henry[@]machine-export.com for more information.