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Oil-Based Mud Waste as a Filler Material in LDPE Composites: Evaluation of Mechanical Properties

Traditionally, the drilling waste generated in oil and gas exploration operations, including spent drilling fluid, is disposed of or treated by several methods, including burial pits, landfill sites and various thermal treatments. This study investigates drilling waste valorisation and its use as fi...

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Autores principales: Siddique, Shohel, Novak, Adam, Guliyev, Emin, Yates, Kyari, Leung, Pak Sing, Njuguna, James
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9003121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35406328
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14071455
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author Siddique, Shohel
Novak, Adam
Guliyev, Emin
Yates, Kyari
Leung, Pak Sing
Njuguna, James
author_facet Siddique, Shohel
Novak, Adam
Guliyev, Emin
Yates, Kyari
Leung, Pak Sing
Njuguna, James
author_sort Siddique, Shohel
collection PubMed
description Traditionally, the drilling waste generated in oil and gas exploration operations, including spent drilling fluid, is disposed of or treated by several methods, including burial pits, landfill sites and various thermal treatments. This study investigates drilling waste valorisation and its use as filler in polymer composites. The effect of the poor particle/polymer interfacial adhesion bonding of the suspended clay in oil-based mud (OBM) slurry and the LDPE matrix is believed to be the main reason behind the poor thermo-mechanical and mechanical properties of low-density polyethylene (LDPE)/OBM slurry nanocomposites. The thermo-mechanical and mechanical performances of LDPE)/OBM slurry nanocomposites without the clay surface treatment and without using compatibilizer are evaluated and discussed. In our previous studies, it has been observed that adding thermally treated reclaimed clay from OBM waste in powder form improves both the thermal and mechanical properties of LDPE nanocomposites. However, incorporating OBM clay in slurry form in the LDPE matrix can decrease the thermal stability remarkably, which was reported recently, and thereby has increased the interest to identify the mechanical response of the composite material after adding this filler. The results show the severe deterioration of the tensile and flexural properties of the LDPE/OBM slurry composites compared to those properties of the LDPE/MMT nanocomposites in this study. It is hypothesised, based on the observation of the different test results in this study, that this deterioration in the mechanical properties of the materials was associated with the poor Van der Waals force between the polymer molecules/clay platelets and the applied force. The decohesion between the matrix and OBM slurry nanoparticles under stress conditions generated stress concentration through the void area between the matrix and nanoparticles, resulting in sample failure. Interfacial adhesion bonding appears to be a key factor influencing the mechanical properties of the manufactured nanocomposite materials.
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spelling pubmed-90031212022-04-13 Oil-Based Mud Waste as a Filler Material in LDPE Composites: Evaluation of Mechanical Properties Siddique, Shohel Novak, Adam Guliyev, Emin Yates, Kyari Leung, Pak Sing Njuguna, James Polymers (Basel) Article Traditionally, the drilling waste generated in oil and gas exploration operations, including spent drilling fluid, is disposed of or treated by several methods, including burial pits, landfill sites and various thermal treatments. This study investigates drilling waste valorisation and its use as filler in polymer composites. The effect of the poor particle/polymer interfacial adhesion bonding of the suspended clay in oil-based mud (OBM) slurry and the LDPE matrix is believed to be the main reason behind the poor thermo-mechanical and mechanical properties of low-density polyethylene (LDPE)/OBM slurry nanocomposites. The thermo-mechanical and mechanical performances of LDPE)/OBM slurry nanocomposites without the clay surface treatment and without using compatibilizer are evaluated and discussed. In our previous studies, it has been observed that adding thermally treated reclaimed clay from OBM waste in powder form improves both the thermal and mechanical properties of LDPE nanocomposites. However, incorporating OBM clay in slurry form in the LDPE matrix can decrease the thermal stability remarkably, which was reported recently, and thereby has increased the interest to identify the mechanical response of the composite material after adding this filler. The results show the severe deterioration of the tensile and flexural properties of the LDPE/OBM slurry composites compared to those properties of the LDPE/MMT nanocomposites in this study. It is hypothesised, based on the observation of the different test results in this study, that this deterioration in the mechanical properties of the materials was associated with the poor Van der Waals force between the polymer molecules/clay platelets and the applied force. The decohesion between the matrix and OBM slurry nanoparticles under stress conditions generated stress concentration through the void area between the matrix and nanoparticles, resulting in sample failure. Interfacial adhesion bonding appears to be a key factor influencing the mechanical properties of the manufactured nanocomposite materials. MDPI 2022-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC9003121/ /pubmed/35406328 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14071455 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Siddique, Shohel
Novak, Adam
Guliyev, Emin
Yates, Kyari
Leung, Pak Sing
Njuguna, James
Oil-Based Mud Waste as a Filler Material in LDPE Composites: Evaluation of Mechanical Properties
title Oil-Based Mud Waste as a Filler Material in LDPE Composites: Evaluation of Mechanical Properties
title_full Oil-Based Mud Waste as a Filler Material in LDPE Composites: Evaluation of Mechanical Properties
title_fullStr Oil-Based Mud Waste as a Filler Material in LDPE Composites: Evaluation of Mechanical Properties
title_full_unstemmed Oil-Based Mud Waste as a Filler Material in LDPE Composites: Evaluation of Mechanical Properties
title_short Oil-Based Mud Waste as a Filler Material in LDPE Composites: Evaluation of Mechanical Properties
title_sort oil-based mud waste as a filler material in ldpe composites: evaluation of mechanical properties
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9003121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35406328
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14071455
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