International Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition in China 2010
DOI: 10.2118/132228-ms
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Cementing Solutions for Corrosive Well Environments

Abstract: Main factors which are responsible for the corrosion of the cement sheath in wells are determined based on lab tests and field analyses from a literature survey. A description of the chemistry, mineralogy, physical properties of API well cements and their mechanisms of corrosion in the presence of aggressive formation and injection fluids (such as magnesia or sulfate containing brines and CO 2 ) are given. API cement hydration mainly produces Calcium-Silicate-Hydrate (C-S-H) phases, which are responsible for t… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The interaction between cement and CO 2 in the rocks has gained significance in recent years Moroni et al 2009;Brandl et al 2010;Le Guen et al 2008). Geological storage of CO 2 in depleted and partially depleted oil fields has gained increasing global interest as an economically viable means of reducing CO 2 emissions, while recovering extra oil.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The interaction between cement and CO 2 in the rocks has gained significance in recent years Moroni et al 2009;Brandl et al 2010;Le Guen et al 2008). Geological storage of CO 2 in depleted and partially depleted oil fields has gained increasing global interest as an economically viable means of reducing CO 2 emissions, while recovering extra oil.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The respective concentration of the different species is given by the dissociation constant of carbonic acid in water. Decomposition of cement occurs in two distinct steps, as visually observed in experiments conducted by Duguid and Scherer (2010) and Brandl et al (2010). These two steps are (1) carbonation and (2) calcium carbonate dissolution, which are explained in the following.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…The load for testing was 100 g, and the hold time was 10 s. Porosity and permeability affect the hydraulic integrity of cement sheath. [19][20][21] Porosity of the cement samples before and after the corrosion was determined by mercury intrusion porosimetry (PoreMaster-60, Quantachrome, USA). Gas permeability of the cement samples was determined using a gas permeability tester (DKS-3, Hai'an Petroleum Instrument, China) according to Darcy's law.…”
Section: Characterizationmentioning
confidence: 99%