WO2009018273A1 - Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines - Google Patents

Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2009018273A1
WO2009018273A1 PCT/US2008/071469 US2008071469W WO2009018273A1 WO 2009018273 A1 WO2009018273 A1 WO 2009018273A1 US 2008071469 W US2008071469 W US 2008071469W WO 2009018273 A1 WO2009018273 A1 WO 2009018273A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
formate
recovery solvent
brine
halide
contaminated
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2008/071469
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Robert L. Horton
Hui Zhang
Morris Arvie, Jr.
Original Assignee
M-I Llc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by M-I Llc filed Critical M-I Llc
Priority to US12/671,253 priority Critical patent/US8344179B2/en
Priority to MX2010001163A priority patent/MX2010001163A/en
Priority to AU2008282288A priority patent/AU2008282288B2/en
Priority to EP08782488.4A priority patent/EP2188490B1/en
Priority to CA2694910A priority patent/CA2694910C/en
Priority to BRPI0815005-2A2A priority patent/BRPI0815005A2/en
Priority to EA201070224A priority patent/EA016766B1/en
Publication of WO2009018273A1 publication Critical patent/WO2009018273A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B21/00Methods or apparatus for flushing boreholes, e.g. by use of exhaust air from motor
    • E21B21/06Arrangements for treating drilling fluids outside the borehole
    • E21B21/068Arrangements for treating drilling fluids outside the borehole using chemical treatment

Definitions

  • Embodiments disclosed herein relate generally to wellbore fluids. More specifically, embodiments of the present disclosure relate to the recovery of drilling and completion fluids.
  • drill bit cutting surfaces When drilling or completing wells in earth formations, various fluids typically are used in the well for a variety of reasons. Common uses for well fluids include: lubrication and cooling of drill bit cutting surfaces while drilling generally or drilling- in (i.e., drilling in a targeted petroliferous formation), transportation of "cuttings" (pieces of formation dislodged by the cutting action of the teeth on a drill bit) to the surface, controlling formation fluid pressure to prevent blowouts, maintaining well stability, suspending solids in the well, minimizing fluid loss into and stabilizing the formation through which the well is being drilled, fracturing the formation in the vicinity of the well, displacing the fluid within the well with another fluid, cleaning the well, testing the well, fluid used for emplacing a packer, abandoning the well or preparing the well for abandonment, and otherwise treating the well or the formation.
  • drilling- in i.e., drilling in a targeted petroliferous formation
  • cuttings pieces of formation dislodged by the cutting action
  • Drilling fluids or muds typically include a base fluid (water, dies el or mineral oil, or a synthetic compound), weighting agents (most frequently barium sulfate or barite is used), bentonite clay to help remove cuttings from the well and to form a filter cake on the walls of the hole, lignosulfonates and lignites to keep the mud in a fluid state, and various other additives that serve specific functions.
  • a base fluid water, dies el or mineral oil, or a synthetic compound
  • weighting agents most frequently barium sulfate or barite is used
  • bentonite clay to help remove cuttings from the well and to form a filter cake on the walls of the hole
  • lignosulfonates and lignites to keep the mud in a fluid state
  • various other additives that serve specific functions.
  • WBMs water-based muds
  • Brines such as, for example, aqueous CaBr 2
  • WBMs water
  • Brines enhance the performance of WBMs by preventing the hydration, spallation and migration of the resulting fines from swelling clay to reduce formation damage caused by solids, clay swelling, or fines migration.
  • a brine system may be selected to achieve a suitable density for use in a particular well- drilling operation.
  • One advantage of using brines is that for a formation that is found to interact adversely with one type of brine, there is often another type of brine available with which that formation will not interact adversely.
  • brines are selected from halide salts of mono- or divalent cations, such as sodium, potassium, calcium, and zinc.
  • Chloride-based brines of this type have been used in the petroleum industry for over 50 years and bromide-based brines, for at least 25 years. Formate- based brines, however, have only been widely used in the industry relatively recently (roughly the past ten years).
  • Cesium formate which is a particular formate that has been more recently used in drilling and completion fluids, may be used as a solids-free base fluid.
  • Cesium formate is the densest of the clear alkali formate fluids, having a specific gravity of 2.3 (density of 19.2 pounds per gallon). Because of this intrinsic high density, the necessity of weighting agents, such as barium sulfate, which can damage tools and the formation, can be eliminated.
  • Other alkali formates which are of lower density than cesium formate, and that are typically used in drilling and completion fluids include potassium formate and sodium formate. Lower density formates are often blended with cesium formate to produce a fluid having a specific gravity between 1.0 and 2.3.
  • cesium formate is considered an environmentally safer product than other drilling fluids on the market. [0008] However, despite the desirable performance that results from drilling a well with cesium formate, there are effective limitations on its use. A fluid that includes cesium formate is relatively expensive, so the economics of drilling require that any available cesium formate be reclaimed and recycled. There are, however, limitations on reclamation processes, in terms of both maximum percentages of cesium formate reclaimed and economical feasibility.
  • embodiments disclosed herein relate to a method of recovering formate from a halide-contaminated formate brine that includes mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; separating halide contaminants from the formate; and recovering the formate from the formate recovery solvent.
  • embodiments disclosed herein relate to a method of recovering formate brine from a halide-contaminated formate brine that includes mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; filtering halide precipitants from the mixture of the formate recovery solvent and the formate brine; and distilling the mixture to recover the formate brine from the formate recovery solvent.
  • embodiments disclosed herein relate to a method of recovering formate from a halide-contaminated formate brine that includes mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; extracting the formate into the formate recovery solvent; separating the formate recovery solvent comprising the formate from an aqueous phase comprising the halide contaminants; and distilling the formate and the formate recovery solvent to recover formate.
  • FIG. 1 is a simplified process flow diagram for reclaiming a formate brine, according to embodiments disclosed herein.
  • FIG, 2 is a simplified process flow diagram for reclaiming a formate brine, according to embodiments disclosed herein.
  • embodiments disclosed herein relate to spent wellbore fluids.
  • embodiments of the present disclosure relate methods to recover brine from a spent drilling fluid or other well servicing fluid.
  • brine is a term understood by those skilled in the art of drilling and oil recovery to refer to a salt solution of a particular density used as part of a wellbore fluid.
  • brine include, but are not limited to, formate, acetate, and other carboxylates, chloride, bromide, iodide, tungstate, poly-tungtate, heteropoly-tungstate, carbonate, bicarbonate, or nitrate salts of ammonium, sodium, potassium, cesium, rubidium, lithium, calcium, magnesium, zinc, or barium, combinations and blends thereof.
  • the brines recovered from the wellbore fluids of the present disclosure include, but are not limited to, cesium formate, potassium formate, cesium acetate, potassium acetate, and/or other cesium or potassium carboxylates, and the like.
  • a wellbore fluid when used and recovered, the fluid will contain the brine as well as various additives, solids, and other debris that were brought up from the wellbore operation. Additionally, a wellbore fluid may contain other dissolved salts, such as halide salts, that may be present in the returned wellbore fluid for a variety of reasons. In recovering a brine, such as a formate brine, it may be desirable to remove other dissolved salts, such as halides, to recover a more pure brine. However, halides are known to be very difficult to remove from formate brine solutions due to their high solubility.
  • a reclaimed formate brine wherein the content of halide salts has been significantly reduced may be obtained.
  • Preferential removal of halide salts in a particular embodiment, may be achieved by using a formate recovery solvent to separate out halide contaminants.
  • formate recovery solvent refers to a solvent having a high capacity to dissolve formate salts, but little capacity to dissolve halide salts.
  • solvents examples include polar, non-aqueous solvents, such as, for example various lactams (cyclic amide), lactones (cyclic ester), or other solvents known in the art. In one embodiment, such 5- or 6-membered lactams and lactones may be used.
  • 2-pyrrolidone or N-hydrocarbyl-2-pyrrolidone may be used. While N-hydrocarbyl-2-pyrrolidone may include an alkyl, aryl, or alkaryl group ranging from 1 to 10 carbons in length, exemplary examples of solvents suitable for use in the reclamation process of the present disclosure include N-methylpyrrolidone and N-octylpyrrolidone.
  • a formate recovery solvent by contacting a formate recovery solvent with a halide-contaminated brine, separation of the halide salts may be achieved.
  • the halide salts may either be precipitated out of solution or halide salts and formate salts partitioned into two immiscible liquids.
  • at least one separation technique may be used assist in the recovery of a more pure formate.
  • Typical separation techniques known to those skilled in the art include filtration, liquid-liquid extraction, evaporation, distillation, fractional distillation, fractional crystallization and centrifugation, etc. However, one of ordinary skill in the art would appreciate that multiple techniques may be used in combination.
  • a combination of filtration (i.e., liquid-solid separator) or a separatory funnel (or other liquid-liquid separator) and fractional distillation may be used to reclaim a halide-contaminated brine in accordance with the present disclosure.
  • a process flow diagram for reclaiming a formate brine is shown.
  • a halide-contaminated formate brine 102 is mixed 106 with a formate recovery solvent 104.
  • mixture 106 is filtered 108 such that formate brine and formate recovery solvent are present in filtrate 110, while halide salts, such as NaCl, NaBr, KCl, KBr, CsCl, CsBr, CaCl 2 , etc., remain as filter cake or filtrand 112, especially if the degree of halide-salt contamination is relatively high.
  • Filtrate 110 is then fed to a fractionating column 114.
  • Fractionating column 114 may be used to supply a temperature gradient over which the distillation of filtrate 110 fed into column 114 can occur.
  • formate brine and formate recovery solvent may be separated as two liquids with different boiling points. As the mixture of the two liquids is heated, the vapors that are recovered will be richest in the components of the mixture that boil at the lowest tray temperature, including the formate recovery solvent.
  • the feed starts flowing down but the part of the feed richer in lower boiling component(s), e.g., the formate recovery solvent, vaporizes and rises. However, as it rises, it cools and condenses on the column's plates or packing.
  • Formate recovery solvent which is the "lightest” fluid (those with the lowest boiling point or highest volatility) exits from the top of the columns as overhead 116 and the formate brine, which is "heaviest” component products (those with the highest boiling point) exits from the bottom of the column as bottoms 118.
  • the formate recovery solvent collected as overhead 116 may be recycled 120 for use in further reclamations.
  • bottoms 118 may contain residual solvent therein, and thus, the bottoms 118 may be fed into a second fractionating column 122 for additional distillation/purification. Similar to as described above, formate recovery solvent, which is the "lightest” fluid, exits from the top of the columns as the overhead 124 and the formate brine, which is “heaviest” component product, exits from the bottom of the column as the bottoms 126. Further, one of ordinary skill in the art of separations would appreciate that any number of distillations or other separations may additionally be performed or variations in the general distillation process may be made to more effectively or efficiently separate the formate recovery solvent from the formate brine. Ideally, bottoms 126 produced from the last distillation column, or from the last separation, should contain a substantially halide-free formate brine 126 that is also substantially free of formate recovery solvent.
  • a side draw of water 128 may optionally be taken.
  • Water 128 may either be removed as waste 130 or recycled into feed 130 to adjust the water content of bottoms 126. Removal of water from the brine may also be desirable where the formate brine has taken on excess water during its use.
  • additional precipitation of halide salts may occur, necessitating an additional filtration step prior to feeding bottoms 118 into second fractionating column 122.
  • mixture of a halide- contaminated brine with formate recovery solvent may result in immiscibility between water and the formate recovery solvent.
  • mixing of the brine and formate recovery solvent may be used to separate the halide and formate salts based on their solution preferences for the two different immiscible liquids. That is, the formate recovery solvent may be selected such that formate has a greater affinity (or partition coefficient) for the solvent as compared to water, thus extracting the formate salts from water to the solvent. Separation of the two immiscible liquids may be achieved using separatory funnels (or other liquid-liquid separators).
  • formate- solvent mixture may then be subjected to additional separations, such as distillation separation or vaporization, to remove the solvent from the formate.
  • a process flow diagram for reclaiming a formate brine is shown.
  • process 100 a halide- contaminated formate brine 102 is mixed 106 with a formate recovery solvent 104.
  • the mixture of hali de-contaminated formate brine 102 and formate recovery solvent 104 results in precipitation of halide salts due to the low capacity for dissolution of halide salts of formate recovery solvent 104.
  • mixture 106 is filtered 108 to remove halide salts, such as NaCl, NaBr, KCl, KBr, CsCl, CsBr, CaCl 2 , etc., remain as filter cake or filtrand 112. If the contamination by halide salts in the brine being reclaimed is low, there may be little or no filter cake or filtrand to recover. Therefore, a liquid-liquid separation 109 is then performed on the mixture resulting in raffinate 113 and extract 110 in order to separate more of the low-concentration halides into the raffinate relative to those in the extract.
  • halide salts such as NaCl, NaBr, KCl, KBr, CsCl, CsBr, CaCl 2 , etc.
  • a liquid-liquid separation may also be desirable when the concentration of halide salts in the brine is high.
  • filtration may remove those salts that precipitate out of solution, and any remaining halides may be concentrated into the raffinate relative to the extract.
  • extract 110 is then fed to a fractionating column 114.
  • Fractionating column 114 may be used to supply a temperature gradient over which the distillation of filtrate 110 fed into column 114 can occur.
  • formate brine and formate recovery solvent may be separated as two liquids with different boiling points. As the mixture of the two liquids is heated, the vapors that are recovered will be richest in the components of the mixture that boil at the lowest tray temperature, including the formate recovery solvent.
  • the feed starts flowing down but the part of the feed richer in lower boiling component(s), e.g., the formate recovery solvent, vaporizes and rises. However, as it rises, it cools and condenses on the column's plates or packing.
  • Formate recovery solvent which is the "lightest” fluid (those with the lowest boiling point or highest volatility) exits from the top of the columns as overhead 116 and the formate brine, which is "heaviest” component products (those with the highest boiling point) exits from the bottom of the column as bottoms 118.
  • the formate recovery solvent collected as overhead 1 16 may be recycled 120 for use in further reclamations.
  • bottoms 1 18 may contain residual solvent therein, and thus, the bottoms 118 may be fed into a second fractionating column 122 for additional distillation/purification. Similar to as described above, formate recovery solvent, which is the "lightest” fluid, exits from the top of the columns as the overhead 124 and the formate brine, which is “heaviest” component product, exits from the bottom of the column as the bottoms 126. Further, one of ordinary skill in the art of separations would appreciate that any number of distillations or other separations may additionally be performed or variations in the general distillation process may be made to more effectively or efficiently separate the formate recovery solvent from the formate brine. Ideally, bottoms 126 produced from the last distillation column, or from the last separation, should contain a substantially halide-free formate brine 126 that is also substantially free of formate recovery solvent.
  • a side draw of water 128 may optionally be taken.
  • Water 128 may either be removed as waste 130 or recycled into feed 130 to adjust the water content of bottoms 126. Removal of water from the brine may also be desirable where the formate brine has taken on excess water during its use.
  • bottoms 1 18 are drawn from fractionating column 114, additional precipitation of halide salts may occur, necessitating an additional filtration step prior to feeding bottoms 118 into second fractionating column 122.
  • mixture of a halide- contaminated brine with formate recovery solvent may result in immiscibility between water and the formate recovery solvent.
  • mixing of the brine and formate recovery solvent may be used to separate the halide and formate salts based on their solution preferences for the two different immiscible liquids. That is, the formate recovery solvent may be selected such that formate has a greater affinity (or partition coefficient) for the solvent as compared to water, thus extracting the formate salts from water to the solvent. Separation of the two immiscible liquids may be achieved using separatory funnels (or other liquid-liquid separators).
  • formate- solvent mixture may then be subjected to additional separations, such as distillation separation or vaporization, to remove the solvent from the formate.
  • additional separations such as distillation separation or vaporization
  • Such removal of viscosifying additives and solid particles may be achieved using a process such as that described in U.S. Patent Application Serial No. XX/XXX,XXX entitled “Reclamation of Formate Brines” filed concurrently herewith, which is assigned to the present assignee and herein incorporated by reference in its entirety, or may include other techniques known to those skilled in the art.
  • embodiments of the present disclosure provide for at least one of the following.
  • a formate brine such as a costly cesium or potassium brine
  • a formate brine may be reclaimed for future use in wellbore applications, reducing costs associated with formate brines (particularly cesium formate).
  • the reclamation may be achieved more efficiently or more economically, allowing for significant reductions in cost.
  • excess water may be removed from the fluid, allowing a more saturated formate brine to be obtained.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Mining & Mineral Resources (AREA)
  • Geology (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Fluid Mechanics (AREA)
  • General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Geochemistry & Mineralogy (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Vaporization, Distillation, Condensation, Sublimation, And Cold Traps (AREA)
  • Heat Treatment Of Water, Waste Water Or Sewage (AREA)
  • Extraction Or Liquid Replacement (AREA)
  • Physical Water Treatments (AREA)
  • Treating Waste Gases (AREA)
  • Fire-Extinguishing Compositions (AREA)
  • Processing Of Solid Wastes (AREA)
  • Organic Low-Molecular-Weight Compounds And Preparation Thereof (AREA)

Abstract

A method of recovering formate from halide-contaminated formate brine that includes mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; separating halide contaminants from the formate; and recovering the formate from the formate recovery solvent is disclosed.

Description

RECLAMATION OF HALIDE-CONTAMINATED FORMATE BRINES
BACKGROUND OF INVENTION
Field of the Invention
[0001] Embodiments disclosed herein relate generally to wellbore fluids. More specifically, embodiments of the present disclosure relate to the recovery of drilling and completion fluids.
Background Art
10002] When drilling or completing wells in earth formations, various fluids typically are used in the well for a variety of reasons. Common uses for well fluids include: lubrication and cooling of drill bit cutting surfaces while drilling generally or drilling- in (i.e., drilling in a targeted petroliferous formation), transportation of "cuttings" (pieces of formation dislodged by the cutting action of the teeth on a drill bit) to the surface, controlling formation fluid pressure to prevent blowouts, maintaining well stability, suspending solids in the well, minimizing fluid loss into and stabilizing the formation through which the well is being drilled, fracturing the formation in the vicinity of the well, displacing the fluid within the well with another fluid, cleaning the well, testing the well, fluid used for emplacing a packer, abandoning the well or preparing the well for abandonment, and otherwise treating the well or the formation.
[0003] Drilling fluids or muds typically include a base fluid (water, dies el or mineral oil, or a synthetic compound), weighting agents (most frequently barium sulfate or barite is used), bentonite clay to help remove cuttings from the well and to form a filter cake on the walls of the hole, lignosulfonates and lignites to keep the mud in a fluid state, and various other additives that serve specific functions.
[0004] Historically, the drilling industry has used water-based muds (WBMs) because they are inexpensive. The used mud and cuttings from wells drilled with WBMs can be readily disposed of onsite at most onshore locations. WBMs and cuttings can also be discharged from platforms in many U.S. offshore waters, as long as they meet current effluent limitations guidelines, discharge standards, and other permit limits.
[0005] Brines (such as, for example, aqueous CaBr2) are commonly used in WBMs because of their wide density range and the fact that brines are typically substantially free of suspended solids. Brines enhance the performance of WBMs by preventing the hydration, spallation and migration of the resulting fines from swelling clay to reduce formation damage caused by solids, clay swelling, or fines migration. A brine system may be selected to achieve a suitable density for use in a particular well- drilling operation. One advantage of using brines is that for a formation that is found to interact adversely with one type of brine, there is often another type of brine available with which that formation will not interact adversely. Typically, brines are selected from halide salts of mono- or divalent cations, such as sodium, potassium, calcium, and zinc. Chloride-based brines of this type have been used in the petroleum industry for over 50 years and bromide-based brines, for at least 25 years. Formate- based brines, however, have only been widely used in the industry relatively recently (roughly the past ten years).
[0006] Cesium formate, which is a particular formate that has been more recently used in drilling and completion fluids, may be used as a solids-free base fluid. Cesium formate is the densest of the clear alkali formate fluids, having a specific gravity of 2.3 (density of 19.2 pounds per gallon). Because of this intrinsic high density, the necessity of weighting agents, such as barium sulfate, which can damage tools and the formation, can be eliminated. Other alkali formates, which are of lower density than cesium formate, and that are typically used in drilling and completion fluids include potassium formate and sodium formate. Lower density formates are often blended with cesium formate to produce a fluid having a specific gravity between 1.0 and 2.3.
[0007] Fluids containing cesium formate have been shown to increase production and improve drilling speeds, which can save time and reduce operating costs. Cesium formate has also been shown to be compatible with all major components of the drilling (BOP, surface equipment, MWD, LWD and mud motors) and completion equipment (metals and elastomers), under conditions of high temperature and pressure. The monovalent nature of cesium formate reduces the likelihood of reservoir formation damage, providing operators with good control and desirable lubricity downhole. Furthermore, alkali formates do not damage the producing formation or downhole metals as their corrosive alternatives (high-density brines) may do. Because it is biodegradable as well as non-corrosive, cesium formate is considered an environmentally safer product than other drilling fluids on the market. [0008] However, despite the desirable performance that results from drilling a well with cesium formate, there are effective limitations on its use. A fluid that includes cesium formate is relatively expensive, so the economics of drilling require that any available cesium formate be reclaimed and recycled. There are, however, limitations on reclamation processes, in terms of both maximum percentages of cesium formate reclaimed and economical feasibility.
[0009] Accordingly, there exists a continuing need for developments in reclamation processes for contaminated formate brines.
SUMMARY OF INVENTION
[0010] In one aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate to a method of recovering formate from a halide-contaminated formate brine that includes mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; separating halide contaminants from the formate; and recovering the formate from the formate recovery solvent.
[0011] In anther aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate to a method of recovering formate brine from a halide-contaminated formate brine that includes mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; filtering halide precipitants from the mixture of the formate recovery solvent and the formate brine; and distilling the mixture to recover the formate brine from the formate recovery solvent.
[0012] In yet another aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate to a method of recovering formate from a halide-contaminated formate brine that includes mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; extracting the formate into the formate recovery solvent; separating the formate recovery solvent comprising the formate from an aqueous phase comprising the halide contaminants; and distilling the formate and the formate recovery solvent to recover formate.
[0013] Other aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description and the appended claims. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0014] FIG. 1 is a simplified process flow diagram for reclaiming a formate brine, according to embodiments disclosed herein.
[0015] FIG, 2 is a simplified process flow diagram for reclaiming a formate brine, according to embodiments disclosed herein.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0016] In one aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate to spent wellbore fluids.
More particularly, embodiments of the present disclosure relate methods to recover brine from a spent drilling fluid or other well servicing fluid.
[0017] For purposes of the present disclosure, brine is a term understood by those skilled in the art of drilling and oil recovery to refer to a salt solution of a particular density used as part of a wellbore fluid. Examples of brine include, but are not limited to, formate, acetate, and other carboxylates, chloride, bromide, iodide, tungstate, poly-tungtate, heteropoly-tungstate, carbonate, bicarbonate, or nitrate salts of ammonium, sodium, potassium, cesium, rubidium, lithium, calcium, magnesium, zinc, or barium, combinations and blends thereof. In a particular embodiment, the brines recovered from the wellbore fluids of the present disclosure, include, but are not limited to, cesium formate, potassium formate, cesium acetate, potassium acetate, and/or other cesium or potassium carboxylates, and the like.
[0018] Generally, when a wellbore fluid is used and recovered, the fluid will contain the brine as well as various additives, solids, and other debris that were brought up from the wellbore operation. Additionally, a wellbore fluid may contain other dissolved salts, such as halide salts, that may be present in the returned wellbore fluid for a variety of reasons. In recovering a brine, such as a formate brine, it may be desirable to remove other dissolved salts, such as halides, to recover a more pure brine. However, halides are known to be very difficult to remove from formate brine solutions due to their high solubility. The inventors of the present disclosure have determined that by preferentially removing at least a portion of halide contaminants present in a formate brine therefrom, a reclaimed formate brine wherein the content of halide salts has been significantly reduced may be obtained. [0019] Preferential removal of halide salts, in a particular embodiment, may be achieved by using a formate recovery solvent to separate out halide contaminants. As used herein, the term "formate recovery solvent" refers to a solvent having a high capacity to dissolve formate salts, but little capacity to dissolve halide salts. Examples of such solvents include polar, non-aqueous solvents, such as, for example various lactams (cyclic amide), lactones (cyclic ester), or other solvents known in the art. In one embodiment, such 5- or 6-membered lactams and lactones may be used. In a particular embodiment, 2-pyrrolidone or N-hydrocarbyl-2-pyrrolidone may be used. While N-hydrocarbyl-2-pyrrolidone may include an alkyl, aryl, or alkaryl group ranging from 1 to 10 carbons in length, exemplary examples of solvents suitable for use in the reclamation process of the present disclosure include N-methylpyrrolidone and N-octylpyrrolidone.
[0020] Thus, by contacting a formate recovery solvent with a halide-contaminated brine, separation of the halide salts may be achieved. Depending on the solvent selected, and its miscibility with water, the halide salts may either be precipitated out of solution or halide salts and formate salts partitioned into two immiscible liquids. Thus, once the halide-contaminated formate brine is mixed with a formate recovery solvent, at least one separation technique may be used assist in the recovery of a more pure formate. Typical separation techniques known to those skilled in the art include filtration, liquid-liquid extraction, evaporation, distillation, fractional distillation, fractional crystallization and centrifugation, etc. However, one of ordinary skill in the art would appreciate that multiple techniques may be used in combination.
[0021] In a particular embodiment, a combination of filtration (i.e., liquid-solid separator) or a separatory funnel (or other liquid-liquid separator) and fractional distillation may be used to reclaim a halide-contaminated brine in accordance with the present disclosure. Referring to FIG. 1, a process flow diagram for reclaiming a formate brine, according to embodiments disclosed herein, is shown. In process 100, a halide-contaminated formate brine 102 is mixed 106 with a formate recovery solvent 104. In the embodiment shown in FIG. 1, the mixture of halide-contaminated formate brine 102 and formate recovery solvent 104 results in precipitation of halide salts due to the low capacity for dissolution of halide salts of formate recovery solvent 104. Thus, to remove precipitated halide salts from the mixture 106, mixture 106 is filtered 108 such that formate brine and formate recovery solvent are present in filtrate 110, while halide salts, such as NaCl, NaBr, KCl, KBr, CsCl, CsBr, CaCl2, etc., remain as filter cake or filtrand 112, especially if the degree of halide-salt contamination is relatively high. Filtrate 110 is then fed to a fractionating column 114.
[0022] Fractionating column 114 may be used to supply a temperature gradient over which the distillation of filtrate 110 fed into column 114 can occur. In using distillation, formate brine and formate recovery solvent may be separated as two liquids with different boiling points. As the mixture of the two liquids is heated, the vapors that are recovered will be richest in the components of the mixture that boil at the lowest tray temperature, including the formate recovery solvent. On entering the column, the feed starts flowing down but the part of the feed richer in lower boiling component(s), e.g., the formate recovery solvent, vaporizes and rises. However, as it rises, it cools and condenses on the column's plates or packing. As vapors continue to rise through the column, the liquid that has condensed will revaporize. Each time this occurs the resulting vapors are more and more concentrated in the more volatile substances. Formate recovery solvent, which is the "lightest" fluid (those with the lowest boiling point or highest volatility) exits from the top of the columns as overhead 116 and the formate brine, which is "heaviest" component products (those with the highest boiling point) exits from the bottom of the column as bottoms 118. The formate recovery solvent collected as overhead 116 may be recycled 120 for use in further reclamations.
[0023] However, one of ordinary skill in the art would appreciate that bottoms 118 may contain residual solvent therein, and thus, the bottoms 118 may be fed into a second fractionating column 122 for additional distillation/purification. Similar to as described above, formate recovery solvent, which is the "lightest" fluid, exits from the top of the columns as the overhead 124 and the formate brine, which is "heaviest" component product, exits from the bottom of the column as the bottoms 126. Further, one of ordinary skill in the art of separations would appreciate that any number of distillations or other separations may additionally be performed or variations in the general distillation process may be made to more effectively or efficiently separate the formate recovery solvent from the formate brine. Ideally, bottoms 126 produced from the last distillation column, or from the last separation, should contain a substantially halide-free formate brine 126 that is also substantially free of formate recovery solvent.
[0024] Additionally, as shown in FIG. 1, in second fractionating column 122, a side draw of water 128 may optionally be taken. Water 128 may either be removed as waste 130 or recycled into feed 130 to adjust the water content of bottoms 126. Removal of water from the brine may also be desirable where the formate brine has taken on excess water during its use. Further, while not shown in FlG. 1, when bottoms 1 18 are drawn from fractionating column 114, additional precipitation of halide salts may occur, necessitating an additional filtration step prior to feeding bottoms 118 into second fractionating column 122.
[0025] Moreover, as described above, in some instances, mixture of a halide- contaminated brine with formate recovery solvent may result in immiscibility between water and the formate recovery solvent. In such an instance, mixing of the brine and formate recovery solvent may be used to separate the halide and formate salts based on their solution preferences for the two different immiscible liquids. That is, the formate recovery solvent may be selected such that formate has a greater affinity (or partition coefficient) for the solvent as compared to water, thus extracting the formate salts from water to the solvent. Separation of the two immiscible liquids may be achieved using separatory funnels (or other liquid-liquid separators). Further, one of ordinary skill in the art would appreciate that to more effectively extract formate from the aqueous phase, it may be desirable to perform multiple extractions. The formate- solvent mixture may then be subjected to additional separations, such as distillation separation or vaporization, to remove the solvent from the formate.
[0026] Referring to FIG. 2, a process flow diagram for reclaiming a formate brine, according to other embodiments disclosed herein, is shown. In process 100, a halide- contaminated formate brine 102 is mixed 106 with a formate recovery solvent 104. In the embodiment shown in FIG. 1 , the mixture of hali de-contaminated formate brine 102 and formate recovery solvent 104 results in precipitation of halide salts due to the low capacity for dissolution of halide salts of formate recovery solvent 104. Thus, to remove precipitated halide salts from the mixture 106, mixture 106 is filtered 108 to remove halide salts, such as NaCl, NaBr, KCl, KBr, CsCl, CsBr, CaCl2, etc., remain as filter cake or filtrand 112. If the contamination by halide salts in the brine being reclaimed is low, there may be little or no filter cake or filtrand to recover. Therefore, a liquid-liquid separation 109 is then performed on the mixture resulting in raffinate 113 and extract 110 in order to separate more of the low-concentration halides into the raffinate relative to those in the extract. Additionally, a liquid-liquid separation may also be desirable when the concentration of halide salts in the brine is high. In such an instance, filtration may remove those salts that precipitate out of solution, and any remaining halides may be concentrated into the raffinate relative to the extract. Further, one of ordinary skill in the art would appreciate that to more effectively extract formate from the aqueous phase, it may be desirable to perform multiple extractions or perform the extractions in a conventional continuous cascading process. Extract 110 is then fed to a fractionating column 114.
[0027] Fractionating column 114 may be used to supply a temperature gradient over which the distillation of filtrate 110 fed into column 114 can occur. In using distillation, formate brine and formate recovery solvent may be separated as two liquids with different boiling points. As the mixture of the two liquids is heated, the vapors that are recovered will be richest in the components of the mixture that boil at the lowest tray temperature, including the formate recovery solvent. On entering the column, the feed starts flowing down but the part of the feed richer in lower boiling component(s), e.g., the formate recovery solvent, vaporizes and rises. However, as it rises, it cools and condenses on the column's plates or packing. As vapors continue to rise through the column, the liquid that has condensed will revaporize. Each time this occurs the resulting vapors are more and more concentrated in the more volatile substances. Formate recovery solvent, which is the "lightest" fluid (those with the lowest boiling point or highest volatility) exits from the top of the columns as overhead 116 and the formate brine, which is "heaviest" component products (those with the highest boiling point) exits from the bottom of the column as bottoms 118. The formate recovery solvent collected as overhead 1 16 may be recycled 120 for use in further reclamations.
[0028] However, one of ordinary skill in the art would appreciate that bottoms 1 18 may contain residual solvent therein, and thus, the bottoms 118 may be fed into a second fractionating column 122 for additional distillation/purification. Similar to as described above, formate recovery solvent, which is the "lightest" fluid, exits from the top of the columns as the overhead 124 and the formate brine, which is "heaviest" component product, exits from the bottom of the column as the bottoms 126. Further, one of ordinary skill in the art of separations would appreciate that any number of distillations or other separations may additionally be performed or variations in the general distillation process may be made to more effectively or efficiently separate the formate recovery solvent from the formate brine. Ideally, bottoms 126 produced from the last distillation column, or from the last separation, should contain a substantially halide-free formate brine 126 that is also substantially free of formate recovery solvent.
[0029] Additionally, as shown in FIG. 1, in second fractionating column 122, a side draw of water 128 may optionally be taken. Water 128 may either be removed as waste 130 or recycled into feed 130 to adjust the water content of bottoms 126. Removal of water from the brine may also be desirable where the formate brine has taken on excess water during its use. Further, while not shown in FIG. 1, when bottoms 1 18 are drawn from fractionating column 114, additional precipitation of halide salts may occur, necessitating an additional filtration step prior to feeding bottoms 118 into second fractionating column 122.
[0030] Moreover, as described above, in some instances, mixture of a halide- contaminated brine with formate recovery solvent may result in immiscibility between water and the formate recovery solvent. In such an instance, mixing of the brine and formate recovery solvent may be used to separate the halide and formate salts based on their solution preferences for the two different immiscible liquids. That is, the formate recovery solvent may be selected such that formate has a greater affinity (or partition coefficient) for the solvent as compared to water, thus extracting the formate salts from water to the solvent. Separation of the two immiscible liquids may be achieved using separatory funnels (or other liquid-liquid separators). Further, one of ordinary skill in the art would appreciate that to more effectively extract formate from the aqueous phase, it may be desirable to perform multiple extractions. The formate- solvent mixture may then be subjected to additional separations, such as distillation separation or vaporization, to remove the solvent from the formate. [0031] Further, while the above describes removing halide contaminants from a formate brine, one of ordinary skill in the art would appreciate that for a returned wellbore fluid, it may be necessary to remove additional additives from the wellbore fluid prior to reuse. For example, it may desirable to remove viscosifying additives and solid particles from the fluid prior to recovery of the formate brine as disclosed herein. Such removal of viscosifying additives and solid particles may be achieved using a process such as that described in U.S. Patent Application Serial No. XX/XXX,XXX entitled "Reclamation of Formate Brines" filed concurrently herewith, which is assigned to the present assignee and herein incorporated by reference in its entirety, or may include other techniques known to those skilled in the art.
100321 EXAMPLES 10033] A halide-contaminated cesium/potassium brine was subjected to a reclamation in accordance with embodiments of the present disclosure. Prior to treatment, a salt analysis was performed on the contaminated brine, the results of which are shown below in Table 1.
Table 1
Figure imgf000011_0001
[0034] One liter of contaminated brine was mixed with 50 mL N-methyl pyrrolidone, and a liquid-liquid extraction was carried out, setting aside the extract. Into the raffinate from this first liquid-liquid extraction, an additional 50 mL of N-methyl pyrrolidone was mixed, and again the second extract was set aside. The extraction process was repeated a third, fourth, and fifth time, and the five samples of extract were combined and placed in a roto-vap apparatus. Then, the solvent was removed from this extract in a roto-vap distillation apparatus, leaving behind a dry solid concentrate. To analytically determine the components extracted, a water solution of the dried extract was formed by dissolving the dried extract in an arbitrary quantity of water (15 mL). Due to the re-dissolution, the analysis of the extract was normalized to the same relative cesium content. The normalized data for the extract, as shown in Table 2 below, shows that the extract brine is significantly enriched in cesium relative to potassium, and depleted in iron and chloride.
Table 2
Figure imgf000012_0001
[0035] The comparison, again, showing that the extract brine is significantly enriched in cesium relative to potassium, and depleted in iron and chloride, may be facilitated by combining Tables 1 and 2 into Table 3, below:
Table 3
Figure imgf000012_0002
[0036] Advantageously, embodiments of the present disclosure provide for at least one of the following. By preferentially solubilizing or extracting formates from a halide-contaminated brine, a formate brine, such as a costly cesium or potassium brine, may be reclaimed for future use in wellbore applications, reducing costs associated with formate brines (particularly cesium formate). Further, by recycling the solvents used in the formate reclamation process, the reclamation may be achieved more efficiently or more economically, allowing for significant reductions in cost. Further, excess water may be removed from the fluid, allowing a more saturated formate brine to be obtained. While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.

Claims

CLAIMSWhat is claimed:
1. A method of recovering formate from a halide-contaminated formate brine, comprising: mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; separating halide contaminants from the formate; and recovering the formate from the formate recovery solvent.
2. The method of claim 1 , wherein the separating the halide contaminants comprises filtering halide precipitants from the mixture of the formate recovery solvent and the formate brine.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the separating the halide contaminants comprises extracting the formate into the formate recovery solvent.
4. The method of claim 3, further comprising: separating the formate recovery solvent comprising formate from an aqueous phase comprising the halide contaminants.
5. The method of claim 1 , wherein the recovering the formate from the formate recovery solvent comprises distilling the formate and the formate recovery solvent.
6. The method of claim 1 , further comprising: recycling the separated formate recovery solvent to mix with additional halide- contaminated formate brine.
7. The method of claim 1 , wherein the formate recovery solvent comprises a polar solvent.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the formate recovery solvent comprises at least one lactam or lactone.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the formate recovery solvent comprises N-alkyl-2- pyrrolidone.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the formate recovery solvent comprises at least one of N-methyl-pyrrolidone and N-octyl-pyrrolidone.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the recovered formate comprises at least one of cesium formate and potassium formate.
12. A method of recovering formate brine from a halide-contaminated formate brine, comprising: mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; filtering halide precipitants from the mixture of the formate recovery solvent and the formate brine; and distilling the mixture to recover the formate brine from the formate recovery solvent.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the formate recovery solvent comprises N-alkyl-2- pyrrolidone.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein the formate recovery solvent comprises at least one of N-methyl-pyrrolidone and N-octyl-pyrrolidone.
15. The method of claim 12, wherein the recovered formate brine comprises at least one of cesium formate and potassium formate.
16. A method of recovering formate from a halide-contaminated formate brine, comprising: mixing a formate recovery solvent and the halide-contaminated formate brine; extracting the formate into the formate recovery solvent; separating the formate recovery solvent comprising the formate from an aqueous phase comprising the halide contaminants; and distilling the formate and the formate recovery solvent to recover formate.
17. The method of claim 16, further comprising: recovering the formate recovery solvent from the distilling as an overhead fraction; and recovering the formate from the distilling as a bottoms fraction.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein the formate recovery solvent comprises N-alkyl-2- pyrrolidone.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the formate recovery solvent comprises at least one of N-methyl-pyrrolidone and N-octyl-pyrrolidone.
20. The method of claim 16, wherein the recovered formate comprises at least one of cesium formate and potassium formate.
PCT/US2008/071469 2007-08-02 2008-07-29 Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines WO2009018273A1 (en)

Priority Applications (7)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/671,253 US8344179B2 (en) 2007-08-02 2008-07-29 Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines
MX2010001163A MX2010001163A (en) 2007-08-02 2008-07-29 Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines.
AU2008282288A AU2008282288B2 (en) 2007-08-02 2008-07-29 Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines
EP08782488.4A EP2188490B1 (en) 2007-08-02 2008-07-29 Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines
CA2694910A CA2694910C (en) 2007-08-02 2008-07-29 Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines
BRPI0815005-2A2A BRPI0815005A2 (en) 2007-08-02 2008-07-29 RECOVERY OF HALETO CONTAMINATED FORMIAT PICKLES
EA201070224A EA016766B1 (en) 2007-08-02 2008-07-29 Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US95363107P 2007-08-02 2007-08-02
US60/953,631 2007-08-02

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2009018273A1 true WO2009018273A1 (en) 2009-02-05

Family

ID=40304812

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2008/071469 WO2009018273A1 (en) 2007-08-02 2008-07-29 Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines

Country Status (9)

Country Link
US (1) US8344179B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2188490B1 (en)
AR (1) AR070643A1 (en)
AU (1) AU2008282288B2 (en)
BR (1) BRPI0815005A2 (en)
CA (1) CA2694910C (en)
EA (1) EA016766B1 (en)
MX (1) MX2010001163A (en)
WO (1) WO2009018273A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US10190030B2 (en) 2009-04-24 2019-01-29 Alger Alternative Energy, Llc Treated geothermal brine compositions with reduced concentrations of silica, iron and lithium
US20140170041A1 (en) * 2009-06-24 2014-06-19 Simbol Inc Methods for Removing Potassium, Rubidium, and Cesium, Selectively or in Combination, From Brines and Resulting Compositions Thereof
US10935006B2 (en) 2009-06-24 2021-03-02 Terralithium Llc Process for producing geothermal power, selective removal of silica and iron from brines, and improved injectivity of treated brines
WO2015080961A2 (en) * 2013-11-27 2015-06-04 Cabot Corporation Methods to separate brine from invert emulsions used in drilling and completion fluids
US10689952B2 (en) * 2014-12-04 2020-06-23 M-I L.L.C. System and method removal of contaminants from drill cuttings
WO2017204875A2 (en) 2016-02-29 2017-11-30 Nammo Talley, Inc. Countermass propulsion system
IL261417B2 (en) * 2016-02-29 2024-05-01 Nammo Talley Inc Countermass liquid for a shoulder launched munition propulsion system
MX2019001687A (en) 2016-09-14 2019-06-06 Halliburton Energy Services Inc Methods for determining the water content of a drilling fluid using water phase salinity.

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6015535A (en) * 1995-04-06 2000-01-18 Cabot Corporation Process for producing purified cesium compound from cesium alum
US6177014B1 (en) * 1998-11-06 2001-01-23 J. Leon Potter Cesium formate drilling fluid recovery process
US20040209781A1 (en) * 2003-04-15 2004-10-21 Michael Harris Method to recover brine from drilling fluids
US7022240B2 (en) * 2003-01-15 2006-04-04 Hart Resource Technologies, Inc. Method for on-site treatment of oil and gas well waste fluids

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB9404374D0 (en) 1994-03-07 1994-04-20 Ici Plc Drilling fluids
DE69629285T2 (en) 1995-04-06 2004-01-29 Cabot Corp METHOD FOR PRODUCING CAESIUM COMPOUNDS
US6779714B2 (en) * 2001-10-29 2004-08-24 Honeywell International Inc. Biologically safe mail box

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6015535A (en) * 1995-04-06 2000-01-18 Cabot Corporation Process for producing purified cesium compound from cesium alum
US6177014B1 (en) * 1998-11-06 2001-01-23 J. Leon Potter Cesium formate drilling fluid recovery process
US7022240B2 (en) * 2003-01-15 2006-04-04 Hart Resource Technologies, Inc. Method for on-site treatment of oil and gas well waste fluids
US20040209781A1 (en) * 2003-04-15 2004-10-21 Michael Harris Method to recover brine from drilling fluids

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP2188490A4 (en) 2011-11-30
AR070643A1 (en) 2010-04-28
CA2694910A1 (en) 2009-02-05
US8344179B2 (en) 2013-01-01
MX2010001163A (en) 2010-03-01
AU2008282288A1 (en) 2009-02-05
EA201070224A1 (en) 2010-08-30
EA016766B1 (en) 2012-07-30
US20100204511A1 (en) 2010-08-12
EP2188490B1 (en) 2015-03-04
BRPI0815005A2 (en) 2015-03-03
AU2008282288B2 (en) 2012-02-09
EP2188490A1 (en) 2010-05-26
CA2694910C (en) 2013-08-20

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP2188490B1 (en) Reclamation of halide-contaminated formate brines
CA2764578C (en) Systems, methods and compositions for the separation and recovery of hydrocarbons from particulate matter
AU2009260960B2 (en) Process for separating solids from valuable or harmful liquids by vaporisation
US20080277165A1 (en) Method and system to recover usable oil-based drilling muds from used and unacceptable oil-based drilling muds
US20230011640A1 (en) Methods for recovering organic salts from industrial process streams
EP2181072A1 (en) Reclamation of formate brines
CA2792250A1 (en) System and method for separating solids from fluids
US20210129044A1 (en) Solvent-Induced Separation of Oilfield Emulsions
JP6640217B2 (en) Method for recovering a processing liquid from a stream containing an alkaline earth metal salt
US12071353B2 (en) Recovery of bromine from waste bromide brines
WO2006026417A2 (en) Method for downhole sulfur removal and recovery
US20190382667A1 (en) Recovering base oil from contaminated invert emulsion fluid for making new oil- /synthetic-based fluids
CA2623581C (en) Heavy oil drilling and recovery
US20240359981A1 (en) Recovery of bromine from waste bromide brines
NO328347B1 (en) Procedure for cleaning oily cuttings coming from drilling oil wells and at the same time recycling the oil component
CN106380037A (en) Recycling and purifying method for oil well operation formate weighting agent

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 08782488

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2694910

Country of ref document: CA

Ref document number: 2008282288

Country of ref document: AU

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 12671253

Country of ref document: US

Ref document number: MX/A/2010/001163

Country of ref document: MX

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: 2008282288

Country of ref document: AU

Date of ref document: 20080729

Kind code of ref document: A

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 201070224

Country of ref document: EA

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2008782488

Country of ref document: EP

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: PI0815005

Country of ref document: BR

Kind code of ref document: A2

Effective date: 20100202