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BAKER HUGHES - Drilling Fluids Reference Manual

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Oil / Synthetic <strong>Fluids</strong><br />

to form oil in water emulsions and have high HLB values. For example, <strong>Drilling</strong> Mud Emulsifier<br />

(DME) has an HLB of 7.7. Surfactants which are more oil soluble (organophilic) and form water in<br />

oil emulsions, have low HLB values. In addition to the HLB characteristic is the type salt or valence<br />

of the hydrophilic portion of the surfactant. Monovalent cations promote oil in water emulsions and<br />

Divalent cations promote water in oil emulsions.<br />

Figure 5-10<br />

Orientation of Surfactants at an Interface<br />

Surfactants orient at interfaces and lower surface energy/tension. This reduces the forces necessary to<br />

form new interfacial area and reduces the interfacial area after the emulsion is formed. Surfactants<br />

oriented at the interface also form a chemical skin around the emulsified, dispersed phase and<br />

mechanically stabilize the interface, thereby helping to prevent droplets from coalescing and breaking<br />

when colliding. Small insoluble particles will also do this by forming a mechanical emulsion.<br />

Examples of mechanical emulsifiers are lignite and bentonite.<br />

Temperature increases the frequency of droplet collisions and decreases the stability of emulsions.<br />

Imposing an electrical field across an emulsion will also tend to break the emulsion, which is the basis<br />

of the emulsion stability test for oil-base fluids. Increasing the viscosity of the external phase will<br />

decrease the frequency of collisions and stabilize the emulsion.<br />

Dispersions<br />

Powdered solid suspended in a liquid are called a dispersed system, or simply a dispersion. The<br />

internal or dispersed phase is the solid and the continuous phase is the liquid (see Figure 5-11).<br />

Figure 5-11<br />

Dispersion of a Mineral Powder<br />

Baker Hughes <strong>Drilling</strong> <strong>Fluids</strong><br />

<strong>Reference</strong> <strong>Manual</strong><br />

5-14 Revised 2006

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