WO1999005392A1 - Method and apparatus for removing oil from oil-contaminated particulate material as e.g. waste drilling mud - Google Patents
Method and apparatus for removing oil from oil-contaminated particulate material as e.g. waste drilling mud Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO1999005392A1 WO1999005392A1 PCT/GB1998/002217 GB9802217W WO9905392A1 WO 1999005392 A1 WO1999005392 A1 WO 1999005392A1 GB 9802217 W GB9802217 W GB 9802217W WO 9905392 A1 WO9905392 A1 WO 9905392A1
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- oil
- phase
- microemulsion
- surfactant
- water
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status 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 status listed.)
- Ceased
Links
Classifications
-
- E—FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
- E21—EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
- E21B—EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
- E21B41/00—Equipment or details not covered by groups E21B15/00 - E21B40/00
- E21B41/005—Waste disposal systems
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01D—SEPARATION
- B01D21/00—Separation of suspended solid particles from liquids by sedimentation
- B01D21/009—Heating or cooling mechanisms specially adapted for settling tanks
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01D—SEPARATION
- B01D21/00—Separation of suspended solid particles from liquids by sedimentation
- B01D21/01—Separation of suspended solid particles from liquids by sedimentation using flocculating agents
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01D—SEPARATION
- B01D21/00—Separation of suspended solid particles from liquids by sedimentation
- B01D21/26—Separation of sediment aided by centrifugal force or centripetal force
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B09—DISPOSAL OF SOLID WASTE; RECLAMATION OF CONTAMINATED SOIL
- B09C—RECLAMATION OF CONTAMINATED SOIL
- B09C1/00—Reclamation of contaminated soil
- B09C1/02—Extraction using liquids, e.g. washing, leaching, flotation
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C02—TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
- C02F—TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
- C02F1/00—Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
- C02F1/68—Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by addition of specified substances, e.g. trace elements, for ameliorating potable water
- C02F1/682—Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by addition of specified substances, e.g. trace elements, for ameliorating potable water by addition of chemical compounds for dispersing an oily layer on water
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C02—TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
- C02F—TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
- C02F3/00—Biological treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
- C02F3/34—Biological treatment of water, waste water, or sewage characterised by the microorganisms used
- C02F3/344—Biological treatment of water, waste water, or sewage characterised by the microorganisms used for digestion of mineral oil
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C10—PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
- C10G—CRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
- C10G1/00—Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures from oil-shale, oil-sand, or non-melting solid carbonaceous or similar materials, e.g. wood, coal
-
- E—FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
- E21—EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
- E21B—EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
- E21B21/00—Methods or apparatus for flushing boreholes, e.g. by use of exhaust air from motor
- E21B21/06—Arrangements for treating drilling fluids outside the borehole
- E21B21/063—Arrangements for treating drilling fluids outside the borehole by separating components
- E21B21/065—Separating solids from drilling fluids
- E21B21/066—Separating solids from drilling fluids with further treatment of the solids, e.g. for disposal
-
- E—FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
- E21—EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
- E21B—EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
- E21B21/00—Methods or apparatus for flushing boreholes, e.g. by use of exhaust air from motor
- E21B21/06—Arrangements for treating drilling fluids outside the borehole
- E21B21/068—Arrangements for treating drilling fluids outside the borehole using chemical treatment
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01D—SEPARATION
- B01D2221/00—Applications of separation devices
- B01D2221/04—Separation devices for treating liquids from earth drilling, mining
Definitions
- This invention relates to a method for the remediation of waste drilling muds generated during oil-winning operations.
- the process involves conversion of the oil in the mud to a water-in-oil microemulsion, and its subsequent extraction from the particulate fraction by floatation. Muds so treated are rendered entirely free of oil.
- the residue a mixture of rock particles and colloidal clay
- the recovered oil can be re-used, burned or biodegraded.
- Drilling muds are used as lubricants and stabilisers in the drilling of wells as part of the oil-winning operation. There are a large number of different mud formulations but they can be subdivided into just two groups, those based on oil and those based on water. Oil-based muds generally perform better than water- based muds and are in common use where drilling operations is particularly difficult. For example, oil-based muds are used almost exclusively in North Sea oil-winning operations, as a consequence of the practice of horizontal (as opposed to vertical) drilling.
- Oil-based muds consist of an oil, which may be a mineral oil or a synthetic oil plus a detergent plus variable amounts of colloidal clay (e.g. bentonite), added as required during the drilling operation.
- the oil acts basically as a lubricant and the colloidal clay stabilises the walls of the well.
- a used drilling mud consists of the original oil-lubricant, variable amounts of colloidal clay, sea-water and drilled rock particles.
- a commercially viable WDM remediation/bioremediation technology must reduce the oil content of the WDM to 1% w/w oil or less.
- the infrastructure to support it must also conform to weight- and power- requirements for installation on the rig should on-rig processing be desired (transport to shore prior to processing will incur a high cost disincentive) .
- relatively stringent performance factors must be met for any potentially viable technology. This necessarily means that relatively straightforward technologies, requiring plant with a minimum of sophistication, will be preferred.
- a method for removing oil from oil-contaminated particulate material comprising the steps of mixing the oil-contaminated material with a microemulsion-forming surfactant, and an excess of water, or an aqueous salt solution, and allowing the resulting mixture to separate into an upper microemulsion phase, an intermediate conjugate polar phase (i.e. the aqueous phase in this case) and a lower layer of oil free solids.
- the oil-contaminated particulate material is waste drilling mud.
- the water or aqueous salt solution may be added before, after or together with the surfactant.
- a microemulsion for use in the present invention is preferably one wherein the contact interfacial tension generated between a microemulsion phase and a conjugate polar phase is extremely low. Most preferably the interfacial tension is less than 10" 4 mNm" 1 .
- the microemulsion is chosen from the group comprising sodium bis-2-ethylhexyl sulphosuccinate, sodium dodecyl sulphate, didodecyldimethyl ammonium bromide, trioctyl ammonium chloride, hexadexyltrimethylammonium bromide, polyoxyethylene ethers of aliphatic alcohols, polyoxyethylene ethers of 4-t-octylphenol, and polyoxyetheylene esters of sorbitol and any other cationic, anionic or nonionic detergent either in commercial manufacture, or custom synthesized or biologically manufactured.
- the method may further comprise the steps of temperature and/or ionic strength adjustment to enable ultralow surface tensions to be established.
- the invention permits a Winsor Type II system to be established comprising an upper microemulsion phase containing all the oil and surfactant, a middle aqueous phase and a lower solids phase, wherein the solids phase is devoid of oil.
- the method further comprises a step wherein the oil is recovered.
- Recovered oil may be reused.
- the method may comprise a step wherein the oil in microemulsion form is biodegraded by inoculation with hydrocarbon degrading micro-organisms.
- bacteria belonging to the genera Rhodococcus or Gordona or Tsukamurella or a mixture of these may be used to degrade the oil .
- the invention further provides an apparatus for carrying out the method as disclosed herein.
- the apparatus comprises a tank reactor for batch-mode separation.
- the apparatus comprises a centrifugal reactor for continuous separation.
- the novel element of the invention is the conversion of the oil in the WDM into an oil-continuous (water-in-oil, w/o) microemulsion. This is achieved by the addition of surfactant, water and (optionally) a salt.
- the surfactant is one of a particular group of surfactants which stabilise microemulsions.
- an excess amount of water is added such that the resulting system consists of two phases: an upper oil-continuous microemulsion phase (containing all of the oil, all of the surfactant and some water) and a lower water phase containing most of the salt (if present) . This is known as a Winsor Type II system.
- Microemulsions, and multiphase systems such as the Winsor II, in which one of the phases is a microemulsion, are a recognised and singular group of colloidal systems which are characterised by the fact that they are thermodynamically stable. This single factor distinguishes microemulsions from all other multicomponent systems containing surfactant, including ordinary emulsions which, by definition, are unstable with respect to a system of separate phases. Microemulsions form spontaneously when their components are mixed (this is the corollary of thermodynamic stability) and, once formed, remain so unless measures are taken to break the microemulsion (usually by adding salt or changing the temperature) .
- Microemulsion-forming surfactants are described in the literature, and it is possible to determine, for any given surfactant, whether it will or will not form a microemulsion.
- Microemulsion-forming surfactants can be selected from the range of existing commercially available surfactants, or they can be custom-designed, or they can be purified from a living organism, biosurfactants .
- microemulsions relevant to this invention are the fact that the contact interfacial tension generated between a microemulsion phase and a conjugate polar phase (e.g. water, air, or a solid material such as clay) is extremely low. Under certain conditions it can be immeasurably low ( ⁇ 10 "4 mNm "1 ) .
- the interfacial tension of an oil such as n-heptane and water is of the order of lOOmNm "1 , i.e. higher by a factor of at least 10 6 .
- Ultralow surface tensions, hence water or microemulsion formation, is established, for a given surfactant, by appropriate adjustment of temperature and salt concentration (ionic strength) .
- This invention is based on the concept that, on microemulsification, the interfacial surface tension between the oil and the particulate phases of the WDM will decrease to essentially zero and that this will facilitate the separation of the two phases, on addition of water or aqueous salts solution.
- the process can be envisaged in two stages: (i) conversion of the oil to a w/o microemulsion and (ii) separation of the microemulsified oil from the cuttings by floatation, once again using water or aqueous salts solution.
- these two steps can be combined by establishing conditions which permit the formation of a Winsor II system (namely by stirring the WDM with surfactant, water and (optionally) salt, at a suitable temperature for a suitable length of time.
- microemulsification which is normally complete in a matter of seconds or minutes
- the system is permitted to phase-separate (this process may be facilitated by low-speed centrifugation) .
- the resulting Winsor II consists of an upper microemulsion phase, containing all of the oil and surfactant, a middle aqueous and a lower oil free solids phase, absolutely devoid of oil.
- the oil and surfactant may be separated (i.e. the microemulsion decomposed or broken) using well- documented procedures.
- the recovered Winsor II is warmed or cooled such that the surfactant partitions entirely out of the oil-phase, resulting in a two-phase system, one of pure oil and one of an aqueous surfactant solution.
- the direction of the temperature change is dictated by the type of surfactant used.
- the recovered microemulsion phase is stirred with water containing no salts . On standing the mixture separates out into an oil phase containing no surfactant and aqueous solution of the surfactant.
- the resulting aqueous surfactant phase can be recycled to the phase- separation reactor.
- the recovered, pure oil can be reused, burned, or biodegraded.
- the scope of the invention includes the option to biodegrade the w/o microemulsion, rather than recover the surfactant.
- the Winsor II is inoculated with micro-organisms which degrade the oil (preferably oil-tolerant, hydrocarbon-oxidising organisms belonging to the genus Rhodococcus) .
- the Winsor system becomes an emulsion consisting of droplets of water-in-oil microemulsion in a continuous aqueous phase.
- microemulsified nature of the oil confers the specific advantage that the degree of dispersion of the microemulsion phase obtained for a given stirring rate (shear force), and hence the total interfacial surface area generated, is much greater than for the equivalent water+oil (no surfactant) system. This again is a consequence of the ultralow surface-tension condition.
- Good dispersion facilitates bioremediation on the basis the availability of interfacial surface area is rate limiting in hydrocarbon biodegradation.
- a sample of waste drilling mud was obtained from a North Sea drilling platform.
- the material consists of oil (13 + /_ 1% by weight), the remainder being solid material. This material was treated as follows:
- the invention extends to
- surfactant ionic, or non-ionic, including but not restricted to, sodium bis-2- ethylhexyl sulphosuccinate; sodium dodecyl sulphate; didodecyldimethyl ammonium bromide; trioctylammonium chloride; hexadexyltrimethylammonium bromide; polyoxyethylene ethers of aliphatic alcohols, e.g. Brij 56, Brij 96; polyoxyethylene ethers of 4-t- octylphenol, e.g. Triton X-100, Nonidet P40; polyoxyethylene esters of sorbitol, e.g. Tween 85. Biosurfactants may also be used.
- any other type of surface-active component (commonly known as a co-surfactant), which complements the function of the designated surfactant.
- examples include but are not restricted to any member alcohol compound, any carboxylic acid compound and any halogenated hydrocarbon compound.
- oil is taken to mean a water-immiscible hydrocarbon compound or silicone compound, or derivatives or mixtures thereof.
- any microemulsion-stabilising surfactant or a mixture of several, and includes both biodegradable or non-biodegradable surfactants of any origin including biosurfactants .
- Any salt may be used.
- Surfactants and salts may be used in any combination.
- Oil-based drilling muds of any formulation are oils-based drilling muds of any formulation.
- phase-separation can be carried out in a simple tank reactor (separation of the microemulsion, water and particulate phases according to buoyant density, under gravity) .
- a Winsor II system i.e. water, surfactant and a volume of clean oil to prime the system
- WDM introduced at the centre-of-rotation passes under centripetal acceleration through the microemulsion phase, where the oil is retained, and the clean particulate material passes through into the water-phase (thus the microemulsion phase acts as a "liquid membrane"). This can be modified for continuous operation.
- the invention is designed principally to deal with WDMs but can be extended to include any oil-contaminated particulate material, including soils contaminated with petrochemicals and sand and swarf contaminated with oil-based cutting fluids, generated in metal fabrication.
- the invention has the advantage that it requires no sophisticated plant or expensive material for its operation.
- the invention is flexible enough to take cost into account in choosing the surfactant. There are no unwanted by-products.
- the surfactant can be recovered and recycled with high efficiency.
- Biodegradation of the oil in Winsor II microemulsion form in a continuously stirred tank reactor configuration, has the advantage that extremely high surface areas are generated. This leads to good contact between bacteria and oil and hence best possible rates of oil-degradation.
- Bacteria belonging to the genus Rhodococcus are specified on the basis of their oil-tolerance and well-documented ability to degrade a wide range of hydrocarbons. If non-biodegradable surfactants are used there remains the possibility of recovery and recycling following oil degradation.
- the volume of the oil alone is far smaller (about 10%) of the volume of the WDM. Hence effectively the same amount of WDM is bio-treated in a reactor of correspondingly smaller dimension. In addition the cost of transportation to an on-shore site, if necessary, is reduced.
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
- Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
- Mining & Mineral Resources (AREA)
- Geology (AREA)
- Oil, Petroleum & Natural Gas (AREA)
- General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Organic Chemistry (AREA)
- Geochemistry & Mineralogy (AREA)
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Fluid Mechanics (AREA)
- Hydrology & Water Resources (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Water Supply & Treatment (AREA)
- Microbiology (AREA)
- Medicinal Chemistry (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Biodiversity & Conservation Biology (AREA)
- Soil Sciences (AREA)
- Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
- Processing Of Solid Wastes (AREA)
- Purification Treatments By Anaerobic Or Anaerobic And Aerobic Bacteria Or Animals (AREA)
- Micro-Organisms Or Cultivation Processes Thereof (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| GB0001282A GB2342303B (en) | 1997-07-24 | 1998-07-24 | Method and apparatus for removing oil from oil-contaminated particulate material as e.g waste drilling mud |
| AU85473/98A AU8547398A (en) | 1997-07-24 | 1998-07-24 | Method and apparatus for removing oil from oil-contaminated particulate materialas e.g. waste drilling mud |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| GB9715539.4 | 1997-07-24 | ||
| GBGB9715539.4A GB9715539D0 (en) | 1997-07-24 | 1997-07-24 | Surfactant system |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| WO1999005392A1 true WO1999005392A1 (en) | 1999-02-04 |
Family
ID=10816338
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/GB1998/002217 Ceased WO1999005392A1 (en) | 1997-07-24 | 1998-07-24 | Method and apparatus for removing oil from oil-contaminated particulate material as e.g. waste drilling mud |
Country Status (3)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| AU (1) | AU8547398A (en) |
| GB (2) | GB9715539D0 (en) |
| WO (1) | WO1999005392A1 (en) |
Cited By (16)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP1031365A1 (en) * | 1999-02-24 | 2000-08-30 | Basf Aktiengesellschaft | Method for forming agglomerates of particles by wetting |
| GB2347682A (en) * | 1999-03-12 | 2000-09-13 | Univ Napier | A method for the extraction of oil by microemulsification |
| GB2358015A (en) * | 2000-01-07 | 2001-07-11 | Cuthbertson Maunsell Ltd | Treatment of oil-based drilling mud cuttings |
| EP1145776A1 (en) * | 2000-04-12 | 2001-10-17 | Institut Francais Du Petrole | Method of cleaning hydrocarbon contaminated solids using esters of animal or vegetable oils |
| JP2002239368A (en) * | 2001-02-14 | 2002-08-27 | Japan Energy Corp | Novel surfactant and its production method |
| WO2005023430A1 (en) * | 2003-09-09 | 2005-03-17 | Specialised Petroleum Services Group Limited | Waste solid cleaning |
| WO2006061556A1 (en) * | 2004-12-09 | 2006-06-15 | Surfactant Technologies Limited | Enhanced slurrification method |
| US7134496B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2006-11-14 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Method of removing an invert emulsion filter cake after the drilling process using a single phase microemulsion |
| JP2007135425A (en) * | 2005-11-15 | 2007-06-07 | Ritsumeikan | Microorganism and purification method for efficiently purifying actual contaminated soil |
| US7709421B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2010-05-04 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Microemulsions to convert OBM filter cakes to WBM filter cakes having filtration control |
| US7913776B2 (en) | 2007-05-07 | 2011-03-29 | Nahmad David Gandhi | Method and system to recover usable oil-based drilling muds from used and unacceptable oil-based drilling muds |
| US8091644B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2012-01-10 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Microemulsion or in-situ microemulsion for releasing stuck pipe |
| WO2016210061A1 (en) * | 2015-06-25 | 2016-12-29 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Recovering base oil from contaminated invert emulsion fluid for making new oil-/synthetic-based fluids |
| US10647601B2 (en) | 2014-07-02 | 2020-05-12 | Mekorot Water Company, Ltd | Method for bioremediation of contaminated water |
| CN113979601A (en) * | 2021-11-24 | 2022-01-28 | 杭州大地海洋环保股份有限公司 | Method for treating oil stain wastewater |
| CN120247358A (en) * | 2025-03-06 | 2025-07-04 | 广州市净水有限公司 | A surfactant composition and its application in decomposing sludge |
Citations (5)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3716480A (en) * | 1971-06-21 | 1973-02-13 | Demco Inc | Method and apparatus for cleaning solids coated with oil |
| DE3336980A1 (en) * | 1983-10-11 | 1985-04-18 | Sloman Neptun Schiffahrts AG, 2800 Bremen | Process and apparatus for cleaning solid particles contaminated by hydrocarbons and, in particular, oil or derivatives thereof |
| US4938876A (en) * | 1989-03-02 | 1990-07-03 | Ohsol Ernest O | Method for separating oil and water emulsions |
| WO1990009507A1 (en) * | 1989-02-07 | 1990-08-23 | Gulf Canada Resources Limited | Oil removal from hydrocarbon contaminated cuttings |
| US5496469A (en) * | 1993-07-20 | 1996-03-05 | Scraggs; Charles R. | Apparatus for reducing and separating emulsions and homgeneous components from contaminated water |
Family Cites Families (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FR2468402B2 (en) * | 1978-11-13 | 1983-11-04 | Elf Aquitaine | AQUEOUS MICROEMULSIONS OF ORGANIC SUBSTANCES |
| NO165797C (en) * | 1985-01-03 | 1991-04-10 | Berol Kemi Ab | SURFACE ACTIVE COMPOUND AND EMULSION CONTAINING THIS, AND USE THEREOF. |
-
1997
- 1997-07-24 GB GBGB9715539.4A patent/GB9715539D0/en active Pending
-
1998
- 1998-07-24 AU AU85473/98A patent/AU8547398A/en not_active Abandoned
- 1998-07-24 GB GB0001282A patent/GB2342303B/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1998-07-24 WO PCT/GB1998/002217 patent/WO1999005392A1/en not_active Ceased
Patent Citations (5)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3716480A (en) * | 1971-06-21 | 1973-02-13 | Demco Inc | Method and apparatus for cleaning solids coated with oil |
| DE3336980A1 (en) * | 1983-10-11 | 1985-04-18 | Sloman Neptun Schiffahrts AG, 2800 Bremen | Process and apparatus for cleaning solid particles contaminated by hydrocarbons and, in particular, oil or derivatives thereof |
| WO1990009507A1 (en) * | 1989-02-07 | 1990-08-23 | Gulf Canada Resources Limited | Oil removal from hydrocarbon contaminated cuttings |
| US4938876A (en) * | 1989-03-02 | 1990-07-03 | Ohsol Ernest O | Method for separating oil and water emulsions |
| US5496469A (en) * | 1993-07-20 | 1996-03-05 | Scraggs; Charles R. | Apparatus for reducing and separating emulsions and homgeneous components from contaminated water |
Cited By (25)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP1031365A1 (en) * | 1999-02-24 | 2000-08-30 | Basf Aktiengesellschaft | Method for forming agglomerates of particles by wetting |
| GB2347682A (en) * | 1999-03-12 | 2000-09-13 | Univ Napier | A method for the extraction of oil by microemulsification |
| WO2000054868A3 (en) * | 1999-03-12 | 2001-03-01 | Univ Napier | A method for the extraction of oil by microemulsification |
| GB2347682B (en) * | 1999-03-12 | 2003-08-20 | Univ Napier | A method for the extraction of oil by mircoemulsification |
| GB2358015A (en) * | 2000-01-07 | 2001-07-11 | Cuthbertson Maunsell Ltd | Treatment of oil-based drilling mud cuttings |
| EP1145776A1 (en) * | 2000-04-12 | 2001-10-17 | Institut Francais Du Petrole | Method of cleaning hydrocarbon contaminated solids using esters of animal or vegetable oils |
| FR2807680A1 (en) * | 2000-04-12 | 2001-10-19 | Inst Francais Du Petrole | METHOD FOR CLEANING HYDROCARBON POLLUTED SOLIDS USING VEGETABLE OR ANIMAL OIL ESTERS |
| JP2002239368A (en) * | 2001-02-14 | 2002-08-27 | Japan Energy Corp | Novel surfactant and its production method |
| GB2421502B (en) * | 2003-09-09 | 2007-09-26 | Specialised Petroleum Serv Ltd | Waste solid cleaning |
| WO2005023430A1 (en) * | 2003-09-09 | 2005-03-17 | Specialised Petroleum Services Group Limited | Waste solid cleaning |
| GB2421502A (en) * | 2003-09-09 | 2006-06-28 | Specialised Petroleum Serv Ltd | Waste solid cleaning |
| US8091644B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2012-01-10 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Microemulsion or in-situ microemulsion for releasing stuck pipe |
| US7838467B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2010-11-23 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Microemulsions to convert OBM filter cakes to WBM filter cakes having filtration control |
| US7134496B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2006-11-14 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Method of removing an invert emulsion filter cake after the drilling process using a single phase microemulsion |
| US7687439B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2010-03-30 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Method of removing an invert emulsion filter cake after the drilling process using a single phase microemulsion |
| US7709421B2 (en) | 2004-09-03 | 2010-05-04 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Microemulsions to convert OBM filter cakes to WBM filter cakes having filtration control |
| WO2006061556A1 (en) * | 2004-12-09 | 2006-06-15 | Surfactant Technologies Limited | Enhanced slurrification method |
| US8362093B2 (en) | 2004-12-09 | 2013-01-29 | Surface Active Solutions (Holdings) Limited | Enhanced slurrification method |
| JP2007135425A (en) * | 2005-11-15 | 2007-06-07 | Ritsumeikan | Microorganism and purification method for efficiently purifying actual contaminated soil |
| US7913776B2 (en) | 2007-05-07 | 2011-03-29 | Nahmad David Gandhi | Method and system to recover usable oil-based drilling muds from used and unacceptable oil-based drilling muds |
| US10647601B2 (en) | 2014-07-02 | 2020-05-12 | Mekorot Water Company, Ltd | Method for bioremediation of contaminated water |
| WO2016210061A1 (en) * | 2015-06-25 | 2016-12-29 | Baker Hughes Incorporated | Recovering base oil from contaminated invert emulsion fluid for making new oil-/synthetic-based fluids |
| CN113979601A (en) * | 2021-11-24 | 2022-01-28 | 杭州大地海洋环保股份有限公司 | Method for treating oil stain wastewater |
| CN113979601B (en) * | 2021-11-24 | 2023-09-19 | 杭州大地海洋环保股份有限公司 | Greasy dirt waste water treatment method |
| CN120247358A (en) * | 2025-03-06 | 2025-07-04 | 广州市净水有限公司 | A surfactant composition and its application in decomposing sludge |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| GB2342303A (en) | 2000-04-12 |
| AU8547398A (en) | 1999-02-16 |
| GB0001282D0 (en) | 2000-03-08 |
| GB2342303B (en) | 2002-01-23 |
| GB9715539D0 (en) | 1997-10-01 |
Similar Documents
| Publication | Publication Date | Title |
|---|---|---|
| WO1999005392A1 (en) | Method and apparatus for removing oil from oil-contaminated particulate material as e.g. waste drilling mud | |
| US7374690B2 (en) | Processes for removing oil from solid wellbore materials and produced water | |
| US5156686A (en) | Separation of oils from solids | |
| US4599117A (en) | Process for the decontamination of oil-contaminated particulate solids | |
| US4783263A (en) | Detoxification process | |
| EP1165199B1 (en) | A method for the extraction of oil by microemulsification | |
| US5215596A (en) | Separation of oils from solids | |
| Roy et al. | Removal of hazardous oily waste from a soil matrix using surfactants and colloidal gas aphron suspensions under different flow conditions | |
| US5005655A (en) | Partially halogenated ethane solvent removal of oleophylic materials from mineral particles | |
| JPH06262004A (en) | Method for extraction of solvent for treating oily substrate | |
| WO2015106159A1 (en) | Method for treatment of drill cuttings | |
| US5213625A (en) | Separation of oils from solids | |
| WO1993005187A1 (en) | Method of separating oleophilic-hydrophobic material from wash water | |
| US5296040A (en) | Process for cleaning debris containing pollutants | |
| US4444260A (en) | Oil solvation process for the treatment of oil contaminated sand | |
| CA1329319C (en) | Oil removal from hydrocarbon contaminated cuttings | |
| JP5000869B2 (en) | Waste oil treatment method | |
| JP2718569B2 (en) | Pollutant absorbing composition and pollutant absorbing method | |
| US4985083A (en) | Method for decontaminating a material and an assembly for carrying out said method | |
| EP0493357B1 (en) | Method for physico-chemically purifying contaminated sediments | |
| Muherei et al. | Potential of surfactant washing to solve drilling waste environmental problems offshore | |
| WO2002090010A2 (en) | Process for the removal of organic pollutants from sediments | |
| EP0784495B1 (en) | Oil recovery process | |
| US20030022946A1 (en) | Separating an emulsion into an aqueous phase containing a reusable anionic surfactant | |
| Zhang | Removal of hydrophobic organic compounds and surfactants from wastewater: Polyaphron-enhanced solvent extraction and biodegradation |
Legal Events
| Date | Code | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| AK | Designated states |
Kind code of ref document: A1 Designated state(s): AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY CA CH CN CU CZ DE DK EE ES FI GB GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MD MG MK MN MW MX NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SG SI SK SL TJ TM TR TT UA UG US UZ VN YU ZW |
|
| AL | Designated countries for regional patents |
Kind code of ref document: A1 Designated state(s): GH GM KE LS MW SD SZ UG ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GW ML MR NE SN TD TG |
|
| WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 1998936498 Country of ref document: EP |
|
| 121 | Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application | ||
| DFPE | Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101) | ||
| ENP | Entry into the national phase |
Ref country code: GB Ref document number: 200001282 Kind code of ref document: A Format of ref document f/p: F |
|
| NENP | Non-entry into the national phase |
Ref country code: KR |
|
| WWW | Wipo information: withdrawn in national office |
Ref document number: 1998936498 Country of ref document: EP |
|
| REG | Reference to national code |
Ref country code: DE Ref legal event code: 8642 |
|
| 122 | Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase | ||
| NENP | Non-entry into the national phase |
Ref country code: CA |