PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Cornstarch might have ended the Gulf spill agony sooner

Experiments show that drilling mud that behaved more like quicksand and less like ketchup might have prevented the top-kill blowout

2010-12-23
(Press-News.org) On May 25th, 2010, the online arm of Upstream, a newspaper for the international oil and gas industry, reported that British Petroleum had started top-kill procedures on the Macondo well in the Gulf of Mexico.

"The company said that the operation, which will pump heavy mud down the wellbore in an attempt to gain control of the oil flow and ultimately kill the well, began at 1 pm CST," Upstream reported.

The article continued: "Earlier BP Chief Tony Hayward gave the top-kill procedure a 60 percent to 70 percent chance of success."

Physicists watching the situation with interest, were skeptical. One of them, Jonathan Katz, PhD, professor of physics in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, had earlier suggested a simple fix, a change to the mud recipe, that might have altered the odds.

His plan was not adopted and the top kill failed.

After it failed, Katz and colleagues at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory ran experiments with a scale model of the oil well to test his idea.

Their analysis, in press at Physical Review Letters, a peer-reviewed scientific journal that focuses on the rapid dissemination of significant, or notable, results, shows that had Katz's recipe been followed, the top kill might have worked, plugging the gushing well in May instead of two months later.

Making waves

When the top kill was proposed, Katz was serving on the science panel Secretary of Energy Steven Chu had organized to advise the Obama administration about the oil well disaster. Katz and Richard Garwin, an eminent physicist who was also a panelist, discussed the kill plan and realized they had misgivings.

"We were worried that a phenomenon known as a Kelvin-Helmholtz instability would disperse the dense mud into tiny droplets that would be carried out of the well by the leaking crude oil," says Katz.

A Kelvin-Helmholtz instability can occur whenever two fluids move past one another at different speeds. When wind blows over water, for example, the instability manifests itself in the form of waves that rise gently and then curl into chaotic turbulence.

The two physicists made some calculations that showed the interface between the descending kill mud and the ascending crude oil would be similarly unstable.

Katz then realized that a novel mud might suppress the instability. Something had to be added to the mud that would change its dynamic properties.

Ketchup vs. quicksand

To work for the top kill, the mud would need to behave less like ketchup and more like quicksand.

Ketchup is what is known as a shear-thinning fluid (or a Bingham plastic, after the scientist who first mathematically characterized such fluids). Initially it resists flowing. It begins to flow only when the pressure of your fingers on the bottle produces a stress on the condiment that is greater than what is called the yield stress. But after that, it flows freely.

Or as they used to say in the ketchup commercial "Anticipation is making me wait."

Other examples of shear-thinning fluids are toothpaste, mayonnaise, mustard, and — crucially — drilling mud, which is typically a slurry, or watery mixture, of clay and other minerals.

To suppress instability, the mud needed to be a shear-thickening rather than a shear-thinning fluid — like quicksand. As every reader of the Worst Case Scenario Survival Handbook knows, when you fall into quicksand, it is important to move slowly. The faster you move, the more the quicksand resists your movement.

The additive Katz suggested wasn't esoteric or expensive. It was the kitchen staple cornstarch.

If you mix cornstarch and water, pour it in a cookie pan and slap it with your open hand, it doesn't spatter. You can let your hand sink into it, but you can't easily jerk it out. Children play with it, and recipes for cornstarch "oobleck" can be found on the web.

"It can flow slowly as a liquid, but turns stiff and elastic when flow is rapid," Katz says. "If an instability were to occur, this stiffness would suppress it, and the novel mud would sink in the well, accumulating at the bottom until its pressure became sufficient to stop the leak."

A foregone conclusion

But the oil industry is conservative and BP stuck with variations on methods that had worked in the past, even though Katz and Garwin predicted failure.

In late May, crews pumped more than 30,000 barrels of heavy mud down the well in a top-kill attempt. As the physicists had feared, the well spat out the mud and crude oil like a toddler spewing strained peas.

The leak was not stopped until mid-July when the well was finally capped.

Afterward the top-kill attempt, Katz couldn't help but wonder whether his suggestion would have worked. Together with collaborators at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, he constructed a model oil well consisting of a six-foot length of transparent plastic tube filled with a clear oil.

"We poured cornstarch 'mud' into the top of the oil column and observed that, as predicted, the instability was suppressed. The surrogate 'mud' sank rapidly through the oil to the bottom of the tube," Katz says.

Based on this experiment, the addition of a shear-thickening polymer like cornstarch to a dense top-kill mud might have allowed slugs of mud to descend against the upwelling oil instead of being ripped up and spat out of the well. Eventually, the column of mud would have prevented any further infiltration from the oil reservoir, killing the well.

Katz hopes there will never be an opportunity to repeat the experiment at full scale and under field conditions, but recommends the Boy Scout motto: 'Be prepared.'

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Eating less healthy fish may contribute to America's stroke belt

2010-12-23
ST. PAUL, Minn. –People living in the "stroke belt" states eat more fried fish than people living in the rest of the country, which may contribute to the high rate of death from stroke in those states, according to a study published in the December 22, 2010, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Studies have shown that the omega-3 fatty acids in fish, especially fatty fish, may reduce the risk of stroke. Research has shown that frying fish leads to the loss of the natural fatty acids. The study also found that African-Americans ...

Most common adult brain cancer linked to gene deletion, Stanford doctors say

2010-12-23
STANFORD, Calif. — A study fast-tracked for online publication Dec. 22 in the New England Journal of Medicine has identified an important gene deletion in up to one of every four cases of glioblastoma, the most common adult brain cancer. This deletion contributes to tumor development, promotes resistance to therapy and considerably worsens a patient's survival prospects. The deletion of the gene, known as NFKBIA, triggers biochemical processes similar to those resulting from a better-known aberration common in glioblastomas: alteration of the epidermal growth factor receptor, ...

Tau disrupts neural communication prior to neurodegeneration

2010-12-23
A new study is unraveling the earliest events associated with neurodegenerative diseases characterized by abnormal accumulation of tau protein. The research, published by Cell Press in the December 22 issue of the journal Neuron, reveals how tau disrupts neuronal communication at synapses and may help to guide development of therapeutic strategies that precede irreversible neuronal degeneration. Tau normally contributes to the supportive framework of proteins in the cell. It is well established that abnormal tau sometimes clumps into neuron-damaging filamentous deposits ...

Arsenic agent shuts down 2 hard-to-treat cancers in animal experiments

2010-12-23
Washington, DC – Researchers at the Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, a part of Georgetown University Medical Center, have found that an arsenic-based agent already FDA-approved for a type of leukemia may be helpful in another hard-to-treat cancer, Ewing's Sarcoma (ES). The research, based on animal studies, also suggests the drug might be beneficial in treating medulloblastoma, a highly malignant pediatric brain cancer. In the December 22 issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, the investigators describe how years of research has uncovered a common ...

Many cancer cells found to have an 'eat me' signal in Stanford study

2010-12-23
STANFORD, Calif. — Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have discovered that many cancer cells carry the seeds of their own destruction — a protein on the cell surface that signals circulating immune cells to engulf and digest them. On cancer cells, this "eat me" signal is counteracted by a separate "don't eat me" signal that was described in an earlier study. The two discoveries may lead to better cancer therapies, and also solve a mystery about why a previously reported cancer therapy is not more toxic. In the study to be published Dec. 22 in Science ...

What sex are you?

2010-12-23
Sex in mammals is genetically determined. In humans, females have two X chromosomes, while males have one X and one Y chromosome. However, some individuals are born with male genitalia despite having two X chromosomes, a condition known as XX male sex reversal. A team of researchers, led by Paul Thomas, University of Adelaide, Australia, has now determined that overexpression of the Sox3 gene in mice causes frequent XX male sex reversal. The clinical relevance of this was highlighted by the discovery of genomic rearrangements in the regulatory region of the human SOX3 gene ...

KISSing a theory goodbye in the link between puberty and nutrition status

2010-12-23
The timing of the onset of puberty is linked to levels of nutrition: later onset is associated with malnutrition, while earlier onset is linked to childhood obesity. A team of researchers, led by Carol Elias, at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, has now generated data in mice that run counter to current thinking about the molecular pathway by which nutrition status affects the onset of puberty. Further, the team defines a new regulatory pathway for the process, which, if confirmed in humans, could potentially lead to new approaches to treating ...

Picking a poison for brain tumors: Arsenic

2010-12-23
Arsenic is usually thought of as a poison. Despite this, it has been used in medicine for over 2000 years, and the arsenic compound arsenic trioxide (ATO) is FDA approved for the treatment of acute promyelocytic leukemia. Now, a team of researchers, led by Aykut Üren, at Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, has generated data using human cancer cell lines that suggest that ATO might also be of benefit to individuals with certain brain tumors or connective tissue tumors. Certain cancers, in particular brain tumors known as medulloblastomas and connective tissue ...

NIH-led study identifies genetic variant that can lead to severe impulsivity

2010-12-23
A multinational research team led by scientists at the National Institutes of Health has found that a genetic variant of a brain receptor molecule may contribute to violently impulsive behavior when people who carry it are under the influence of alcohol. A report of the findings, which include human genetic analyses and gene knockout studies in animals, appears in the Dec. 23 issue of Nature. "Impulsivity, or action without foresight, is a factor in many pathological behaviors including suicide, aggression, and addiction," explains senior author David Goldman, M.D., ...

How past experiences inform future choices

2010-12-23
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—Researchers at MIT's Picower Institute for Learning and Memory report for the first time how animals' knowledge obtained through past experiences can subconsciously influence their behavior in new situations. The work, which sheds light on how our past experiences inform our future choices, will be reported on Dec. 22 in an advance online publication of Nature. Previous work has shown that when a mouse explores a new space, neurons in its hippocampus, the center of learning and memory, fire sequentially like gunpowder igniting a makeshift fuse. Individual ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Lake tsunamis pose significant threat under warming climate

New Nevada experiments will improve monitoring of nuclear explosions

New study challenges one-size-fits-all approach to vitamin D supplementation guidelines

MBL Director Nipam Patel elected to National Academy of Sciences

The future of digital agriculture

Lahar detection system upgraded for mount rainier

NCSA's Bill Gropp elected to AAAS Council

George Mason University receives over $1.1 million to revolutionize Lyme disease testing

NASA selects BAE systems to develop air quality instrument for NOAA

For microscopic organisms, ocean currents act as 'expressway' to deeper depths, study finds

Rice’s Harvey, Ramesh named to National Academy of Sciences

Oil palm plantations are driving massive downstream impact to watershed

Nanotubes, nanoparticles, and antibodies detect tiny amounts of fentanyl

New eco-friendly lubricant additives protect turbine equipment, waterways

Monoclonal Antibodies in Immunodiagnosis and Immunotherapy appoints new Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Andrei Moroz, PhD

Optical pumped magnetometer magnetocardiography as a potential method of therapy monitoring in fulminant myocarditis

Heart failure registries in Asia – what have we learned?

Study helps understand how energy metabolism is regulated at cellular level

Stay active – or get active – to boost quality of life while aging, study suggests to middle-aged women

*FREE* Friendship-nomination approach identifies key villagers to diffuse health messages

Chromosomal 22q11.2 deletion confers risk for severe spina bifida

Circadian clocks in the brain and muscles coordinate to support daily muscle function

*FREE* The effectiveness of early childhood education programs is scientifically uncertain

Twisting and binding matter waves with photons in a cavity

Sugar-based catalyst upcycles carbon dioxide

Deeper understanding of malaria parasite sexual development unlocks opportunities to block disease spread

Breaking ground: Investigating the long-term effects of early childhood education

Synchronization between the central circadian clock and the circadian clocks of tissues preserves their functioning and prevents ageing

Physicists arrange atoms in extremely close proximity

Scientists track ‘doubling’ in origin of cancer cells

[Press-News.org] Cornstarch might have ended the Gulf spill agony sooner
Experiments show that drilling mud that behaved more like quicksand and less like ketchup might have prevented the top-kill blowout