But with 1000 bar of water pressure, you can shatter shale with the fists of Poseidon, and squeeze out precious, precious methane.
This is The Fracking Thread!
Fracking is an old technique, frequently used for increasing production from worked-out oil wells, but has found new application in unlocking natural gas from tightly-held geology such as shale.
Let's step through this apparently brutal, yet sophisticated process.
In short, you need to:
-Drill vertically to the shale, then horizontally along the shale layer.
-Case & cement hazard areas.
-Use a perforating gun to start the fracturing process.
-Pump fracturing fluid to extend fractures.
-Gas production.
We'll go over these in turn.
Firstly, what is shale gas?
Hydrocarbons are produced over millions of years from deep buried organic matter. Conventionally it can rise into a porous reservoir rock and become trapped under a cap layer.
Or it can form, reservoir *and* be trapped in impermeable shale.
For usable thermal shale gas to form it must be:
>2% organic matter.
Below 600m depth.
Exposed to suitably high pressure & temperature.
Be >20m thick for economic extraction.
Bedrock structure preventing gas from escaping: e.g mountain chain folding, fault movements & uplift.
How do you turn a vertical bore to a horizontal one? Many ways...
A lobed steel rotor rotates from hydraulic pressure inside an elastomer-lined stator with more lobes than the rotor. The number of lobes trade RPM for torque as shown.
The drill fluid also cools the bits and stabilise the shaft in turn.
Where is the drill bit?
Thousands of feet down, sometimes miles away.
Arrays of accelerometers and magnetometers measure inclination (up/ down) and azimuth (compass heading, following magnetic North surveying). Together with drill string length, this allows precise tracking.
What am I drilling?
Data is tracked while drilling, from the vitals:
-Torque, vibration, temperature, pressure.
To surveying options:
-Natural gamma ray sensors, electric resistivity, neutron porosity. These detect density, salt water, hydrocarbon presence etc
How do I transmit the data?
The most steampunk way of all: With a mud pulser!
'Mud' is a general term for drill fluid, used to cool the bit, carry away cuttings and pressurize the shaft.
A pulser transmits low bit-rate data through pressure pulses in the mud itself.
Wellbore casing.
A layered wall of cement & steel providing support for the wellbore, protecting against over & under-pressure, isolating the surface from high pressure zones and preventing contamination of geology or groundwater.
Not just a pipe.
Different casing stages isolate surface zones, production zones etc per engineering requirements. They start wide and get narrower with depth, and feature 'feet' that support cement filling between casing & wall to support & isolate zones.
The perforation gun.
Casing & cementing is well & good, but when we get to the extraction zone we need to be open to the reservoir to start fracturing!
A shaped charge cuts through casing & cement and drives fissures into the shale to start initial fracturing.
Hydraulic fracturing!
Fracking fluid is pumped into the reservoir fissures, over a mile below the surface, at 1,000 bar using huge 2,500hp reciprocating pumps. This places huge stress on the fractured rock, opening the fissures to 200ft-400ft in length.
It is done in stages...
1) Pre-flush stage.
A thin, low friction solution goes first, to open up fissures, lower frictional losses from subsequent stages and cool down the rock so that subterranean heat does not affect subsequent flow viscosity.
2) Pad stage.
High viscosity fluid is pumped in to enlarge the fractures further. This viscous fluid will hold sand, or proppant, in the third stage.
The extent of the fractures are monitored by micro-seismology to ensure they stay within the reservoir.
3) Proppant stage.
Proppant (usually sand) is mixed in with the viscous fluid and injected into the fissures to keep them open once the pressure recedes and prevent the fissures from collapsing, to allow gas extraction to occur.
4) Flush stage:
At the end of slurry placement, a volume of clean 'flush' is pumped in to clear tubulars of proppant. The pressure is then bled off to allow the fractures to close onto the injected proppant.
Chemicals.
Fracking fluid is almost entirely water, but it's carefully tailored to it's specific use, and some of the potential 'ingredients' can be hair raising...
So preventing groundwater contamination is crucial.
But a note of sanity: Fracking takes place over a mile below water tables, in impermeable shale. Waste water can be taken away for reprocessing.
There are risks, but it has the potential to be safe, *if* it is well regulated and kept away from water sources and communities.
It's getting more efficient.
Up to 140 wells have been fracked from a single site, up to 3 miles away.
Measurement & analysis is ever improving.
Waste water recycling is becoming more common.
And practice makes perfect...
The USA is fracking central, with over 1.7 million fracking wells completed. It's a vital link in the energy security of the entire world.
And when Russia turned off the taps in 2022, American LNG rode to the rescue of Europe.
So let's sing a hesitant hymn for this reviled monster, who toils in the gloom for us all. -That even if we do not appreciate it, we might understand it.
Here's to Fracking!
There's a downloadable lecture series for those who are interested, available on Researchgate.
I hope you enjoyed this!
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The glider that almost became a spaceship, how to surf the polar vortex and one man's extraordinary vision to fly higher than anyone...
...Without an engine.
The Perlan project, a thread.
Einar Enervoldson was a jet pilot & a glider pilot who in his youth contributed to the Sierra Project, performing the first scientific study on mountain atmospheric waves: Vast waves caused by powerful winds rising over mountains.
But Einar glimpsed something new...
In time lapse photographs he believed he saw strange disturbances in the stratosphere at extreme altitudes, far higher than the tropospheric mountain waves: This launched a lifetime mission to uncover this strange behaviour at the edge of space.
We'll cover: 1) Basics: Aerofoil lift & lift distribution. 2) Drag: Why it's a little different for helicopters. 3) Controlling for torque. 4) Roll & pitch issues. 5) The swash plate. 6) Vortex ring state. 7) Contra-rotating coaxial. 8) Tandem contra-rotation. 9) Quadcopters.
This is an aerofoil. Lift centres near the 1/4-chord, is perpendicular to airflow and increases with the square of velocity: Remember that, it is crucial!
Lift also increases with the angle of the Aerofoil to the flow. Remember that too!
I flew gliders a few times when young and someday I'll do it again because it's the most enchanting way to fly: You feel everything in the air. Bereft an engine, it's just your muscles flying: You even feel the turbulence and lumps in the air as you pass over hills.
Magic.
#1: Thermals.
Hot ground heats a volume of air more than it's surroundings and, because warm air is less dense, it rises. A huge bubble of air rising in a lazy vortex ring.
Find the centre, turn tight enough to stay there, and you're riding an invisible elevator to heaven.
By the artifice of Man and God is born a furnace that forges the future.
This is the big nuclear reactor thread!
A beginner's guide to the main reactor types, with lots of diagrams...
In this thread we'll cover: 1) Basics of fission & what's a moderator? 2) Light vs heavy water. 3) Light water reactors. 4) Gas Cooled reactors. 5) RBMK: The scary one. 6) Heavy water reactors & CANDU. 7) Fast breeders. 8) Generation IV reactors.
The Basics.
This is the nucleon binding energy graph: Heavy nuclei at the right release energy as they fission their way to the summit.
Nuclear power depends on atoms that do this after absorbing a thermal neutron, and that give off more neutrons during fission.
This is the Ras Al Khair desalination plant in Saudi Arabia. One of the world's largest, it outputs over 1 million cubic metres of water a day.
But how is desalination done?
Get ready for lots of head-melting schematics...
2.2 billion people worldwide lack access to safe drinking water, and for an increasing proportion of humanity fresh water is in short supply.
But energy can fix many problems: In this thread we talk about different desalination technologies.
The oldest method is distillation, which evaporates and re-condenses water. But while it is simple, single open-cycle distillation is also energy intensive, up to 2600kJ/kg when heating water from 25C to 100C, & expensive.
But more complex distillation methods are widely used...
How about a ray of 10 billion suns, prizing apart the secrets of metallurgy, cellular genetics and drug discovery?
A thread on the Diamond Light Source.
Diamond Light Source is a medium power synchrotron in Oxfordshire producing tunable synchrotron radiation for a variety of scientific purposes.
Synchrotron radiation occurs when a relativistic charged particle accelerates perpendicular to it's direction of motion.
In astrophysics, this might be a charged particle orbiting a black hole. In The Diamond Light Source it's produced by electrons, accelerated close to the speed of light, passing through a magnetic undulator.