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The traditional guar gum fracturing fluid system has the drawbacks of the fracturing process of unconventional oil and gas deposits, such as high drag resistance and large residuum harm, which is gradually replaced by the system of the slick water fracturing fluid. The conventional slick water system, however, still has the features of low sand-carrying capability. Therefore, high-viscosity slick water is often used in fracturing operations, but most of the high-viscosity slick water is difficult to prepare, dissolve, and break gels, which needs to be improved. Based on the abovementioned problems, a new type of multifunctional variable-viscosity slick water is proposed in this paper. The self-made loop drag test unit, a dynamic crack sand-carrying model, a multifunctional core flow device, and other equipment were used for testing, and a set of systematic evaluation methods for the performance of multifunctional variable-viscosity slick water are established. In addition, the mechanism of improving sand-carrying capacity and increasing viscosity and solubilization was explained through the macroevaluation experiment of polymer properties and the analysis of the polymer microstructure. The experimental results show that compared with high-viscosity slick water, the multifunctional variable-viscosity slick water has good drag-reducing performance, the drag-reducing rate can reach more than 75%; the intersection value of viscoelastic modulus is about 0.01 Hz, the sand carrying capacity is higher; the gel-breaking time is faster, the residue content is lower, 38.5 ppm; it has the characteristics of low harm, the harm rate to the core is 18.30%; and it also has the performance of enhancing oil recovery.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8374916 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.1c01986 | DOI Listing |
Fuel (Lond)
January 2026
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California 94702-5800, United States.
Fire whirls, a combustion-intensifying phenomenon, offer potential for cleaner, more efficient burns with reduced emissions in environmental applications like oil spill remediation. While most knowledge of fire whirls stems from laboratory-scale experiments, and only a limited subset of these experiments has captured emissions, this study addresses a critical research gap by conducting one of the largest controlled fire whirl experiments to date, focusing on enhancing in-situ burning. Using a 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
September 2025
Instituto de Física (IF), Universidade Federal da Bahia, UFBA, Campus Universitário de Ondina - Ondina, Salvador, Bahia 40210-340, Brazil.
This study investigates the effects of Stokes drift, wind drift factor and angle on oil transport using the MEDSLIK-II model, focusing on the 2019 P-53 platform spill in Brazilian waters. Model accuracy was assessed by the difference in distances between simulated and observed trajectories from Synthetic Aperture Radar. Sixteen simulations tested different wind drift angles (10°-45°), drift factors (0 %, 3 % and 6 %), and Stokes drift inclusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
August 2025
CMCC Foundation - Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change - Global Coastal Ocean Division, Lecce, Italy.
To better understand the potential consequences of future oil spill accidents in the Mediterranean Sea, extensive Monte Carlo simulations were performed using the Lagrangian oil spill model MEDSLIK-II. Stratified sampling was based on the hypothetical distribution of oil spill sources linked to the latest observational inventory of oil slicks. The transport of virtual oil spills was forced by currents and winds provided by the Copernicus Marine Service and ECMWF from 2018 to 2021.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Omega
April 2025
School of Petroleum Engineering, Northeast Petroleum University, Daqing, Heilongjiang 163318, PR China.
Shale reservoirs are usually combined with volumetric fracturing to realize economic development. After different types of fracturing fluids (guar gum, slick water, etc.) enter the reservoirs, hydration effects occur in the shale reservoir and secondary fracture expansion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
April 2025
CSIRO Environment, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia.
Anthropogenic pressures are impacting coastal marine ecosystems, necessitating large-scale interventions to accelerate recovery. Propagule-based restoration holds the potential for restoring shallow coastal systems at hectare scales by harnessing natural dispersal. However, predicting propagule dispersal remains challenging due to the complex hydrodynamic nature of coastal marine ecosystems and the complex behaviors of marine propagules.
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