Silica Fume (Microfine Silica)

Silica Fume (Microfine Silica)

Silica fume (also called microsilica) is used in oil well cementing (primarily during primary and remedial cementing operations) at typical dosages of 5–40% by weight of cement, most commonly 10–30%. Its ultra-fine particles (~0.1–0.2 μm) react pozzolanically with calcium hydroxide to form additional C-S-H gel.

Key usage include:

Gas migration / anti-gas channeling control

Primary reason for use; dramatically reduces permeability and transition time → prevents gas from migrating through the setting cement column (especially critical in gas zones)

High-temperature wells (typically >110–130 °C)

Prevents strength retrogression by converting unstable phases (e.g., α-C₂SH) into more stable tobermorite -like structures → maintains long-term compressive strength

High-pressure/high-temperature (HPHT) cement slurries

Improves durability, lowers permeability, and enhances resistance to CO₂ and H₂S corrosion in aggressive downhole environments

Lightweight cement slurries 

Added to low-density systems (with ceramic microspheres, bentonite, etc.) to compensate for strength loss and improve stability

Squeeze / remedial cementing

Used in low-permeability repair jobs to achieve better sealing and zonal isolation

Typical formulation example (Class G or H cement):

– Silica fume: 20–35% BWOC (by weight of cement)

– Often combined with a dispersant and antifoam agent

In Short:

Silica fume is the most widely used additive specifically for gas-tight cement and high-temperature strength retrogression prevention in oil-well cementing.