Oil-based mud
Oil-based mud is a drilling fluid used in drilling engineering. It is composed of oil as the continuous phase and water as the dispersed phase in conjunction with emulsifiers, wetting agents and gellants. The oil base can be diesel, kerosene, fuel oil, selected crude oil or mineral oil.
Requirements and composition
The requirements are a gravity of 36–37 API, a flash point of, fire point of and an aniline point of.Emulsifiers are important to oil-based mud due to the likelihood of contamination. The water phase of oil-based mud can be freshwater, or a solution of sodium or calcium chloride. The external phase is oil and does not allow the water to contact the formation. The shales don't become water wet.
Poor stability of the emulsion results in the two layers separating into two distinct layers.
Advantages
The advantages are:- high drilling rates
- lowered drill pipe torque and drag,
- less bit balling and
- reduction in differential sticking.
- troublesome shales that would otherwise swell and disperse in water based mud e.g. smectite,
- to drill deep, high-temperature holes that dehydrate water-based mud,
- to drill water-soluble zones and
- to drill producing zones.
Disadvantages
The disadvantages of using oil-based mud, especially in wildcat wells are:- Inability to analyze oil shows in cuttings, because the oil-based mud has fluorescence confusing with the original oil formation.
- Contamination samples of cuttings, cores, sidewall cores for geochemical analysis of TOC and masks the real determination of API gravity due to this contamination.
- Contaminate areas of freshwater aquifers causing environmental damage.
- Disposal of cuttings in an appropriate place to isolate possible environmental contamination.