Abstract
Drilling fluid plays a critical role in drilling engineering. With the deepening implementation of clean production concepts and increasingly stringent environmental regulations, the treatment standards for drilling wastewater at operational sites have been significantly elevated. In response to the characteristics of high oil content, high COD, high chromaticity, high ammonia nitrogen, and total phosphorus content in drilling, the use of fine bubbles to improve gas utilization efficiency and mass transfer effect, combined with ozone gas, is aimed at degrading difficult-to-degrade high-molecular-weight organic compounds, aiming to solve the problems of high viscosity and high oil content in drilling fluids returned from offshore platforms. Indoor simulation experiments have shown that by using ozone fine bubble technology to treat drilling fluids, the viscosity reduction rate can reach over 29%, and the oil removal rate can reach 40%. Ozone fine bubble technology has significant viscosity reduction and oil removal effects on high viscosity drilling fluids.