Geothermal environments are among the most difficult conditions for cements to sur- vive. Normally accepted for high-temperature oil wells silica-modified Portland-based cement formulations are not durable in hostile geothermal environments failing to pro- vide good zonal isolation and metal casing corrosion-protection. High-temperature well cement compositions based on calcium-aluminate cements have been designed to seal such wells. Two types of calcium-aluminate cement are of particular interest for geo- thermal applications. One is–chemical type, calcium-aluminate-phosphate cement (CaP) already used in the field and the other, alkali-activated calcium-aluminate type (ther- mal shock resistant cement, (TSRC), has been recently developed. The CaP cements were designed as CO2 -resistant cements for use in mildly acidic (pH ~ 5.0) CO2 -rich downhole environments. TSRC was formulated to withstand dry-heat – cold water cycles of more than 500°C. This chapter includes information and discussions of cement forming mech- anisms, cements mechanical properties, resistance to mild and strong acids, cement- carbon steel bonding and self-recovery of mechanical strength and fractures closure after imposed damage. Performance of common high-temperature OPC-based composites is discussed for comparison.
CITATION STYLE
Pyatina, T., & Sugama, T. (2018). Cements for High-Temperature Geothermal Wells. In Cement Based Materials. InTech. https://doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.74108
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