Big Data Nanoindentation Characterization of Cross-Scale Mechanical Properties of Oilwell Cement-Elastomer Composites

Title

Big Data Nanoindentation Characterization of Cross-Scale Mechanical Properties of Oilwell Cement-Elastomer Composites

Subject

Styrene
Additives
Big data
Hematite
Microstructure
Emulsification
Polypropylenes
Hydration
Scanning electron microscopy
Elastomers
Silicates
Matrix algebra
Nanoindentation
Calcium silicate

Description

An intensive experimental study is presented of big data nanoindentation (BDNi) characterization to reveal the cross-scale mechanical properties of, and hence distinguish the roles of different phases in, inorganic-organic hybrid oilwell cement-elastomer composites, hydrothermally cured at 160C and 20 MPa for 28 days. Totally three emulsified and particulate elastomers, including styrene-butadiene latex (SBL) emulsion (6, 12, and 14 wt.%), polypropylene (PP) powder (12 wt.%), and nitrile rubber (NR) powder (6 wt.%), and a weighting agent, hematite (50 wt.%), were used as additives to finely tune the mechanical properties and microstructure of the hybrid composites, which were respectively examined by the BDNi and mercury intrusion porosimetry and scanning electron microscopy. BDNi data were statistically deconvoluted by the Gaussian mixture modeling (GMM) to discern mechanically distinct phases and their Youngs moduli and hardness at the micro/nano scale and the bulk composites properties at the macro scale. Results show that the SBL emulsion can be more homogeneously dispersed into the cement matrix, due to its emulsified soft consistency and hydrophilicity, resulting in the formation of soft coatings on, and softer infills intermixed with, the cement hydration products. In contrast, the two hydrophobic, inert, particulate elastomers, PP and NR powders, only act as isolated soft inclusions embedded in the hydrated cement matrix. The NR melts at high temperatures and permeates into the pores of the cement matrix, leading to the formation of complex intervened micromorphology and hence functions better than the PP. All elastomers can effectively reduce the composites Youngs moduli: while the modulus of the major constituent, low-density calcium silicate hydrates, decreases from 20.9 to 11.3 GPa, the bulk composites counterpart from 17.3 to 10.7 GPa, with increasing the elastomer contents. The BDNi enables the identification of multiple phases in the hybrid composites and quantification of the property changes of these phases. 2022, The Authors. All rights reserved.

Creator

Li, Yucheng
Lu, Yunhu
Liu, Li
Luo, Shengmin
Li, He
Deng, Yongfeng
Zhang, Guoping

Date

2022

Type

journalArticle

Identifier

15565068

Citation

Li, Yucheng et al., “Big Data Nanoindentation Characterization of Cross-Scale Mechanical Properties of Oilwell Cement-Elastomer Composites,” Lamar University Midstream Center Research, accessed May 18, 2024, https://lumc.omeka.net/items/show/29315.

Output Formats