Greener Fracking Tech Reduces Injection Of Lots Of Wasteful Fluid
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Chemical expands underground, so drillers can use less fluid that turns into wastewater
April 20, 2015 | and |Current hydraulic fracturing methods are energy-intensive due to the need to pump, on average, 4 million gallons of water per reservoir, at very high pressures and flow rates deep into the ground.
Researchers in the US have created.
The fluid, developed by of Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and coworkers, expands by up to 2.5 times its original volume in response to carbon dioxide. It is made from poly(allylamine) and could reduce the volume of water required for fracking, as well as being non-toxic, a biocide, and a corrosion inhibitor, circumventing the addition of extra chemicals.
‘The fracturing fluid is chemically-responsive, an interesting and promising characteristic that allows control over the system’s hydraulic pressure when needed,’ says , an environmental and chemical engineer at Washington University in the US.
, an environmental engineer at the University of Utah, US, describes the fluid as ‘potentially game-changing’. ‘It has the potential to avoid the environmental issues associated with oil and gas polymers,’ he adds.
Chemistry World. The article was
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