The mud engineer (or drilling fluids engineer) is usually a graduate of a university, college, or technical institute with a focus on chemical, mineral, or mining engineering. However, it is also possible to start with a high school diploma and work alongside a mud engineer, gradually gaining experience on the job and working one's way up to the mud engineer position. After several years as, for example, a drilling assistant, one can obtain the role by demonstrating sufficient expertise in math, physics, geology, chemistry, IT, and related fields. Large oil companies, such as Halliburton, operate mud schools. There are also privately run institutions, like the Oklahoma Mud School. The advantage of attending an oil company-run mud school is that the company is more likely to hire graduates directly. Before the mid-1940s, the
driller dealt with drilling mud; but specialization occurred with the increasing complexity and overlapped more with the geologist. Prior to drilling a well, a "mud program" will be worked out according to the expected geology, in which products to be used, concentrations of those products, and fluid specifications at different depths are all predetermined. As the hole is drilled and gets deeper, more mud is required, and the mud engineer is responsible for making sure that the new mud to be added is made up to the required specifications. The chemical composition of the mud will be designed so as to stabilize the hole. It is sometimes necessary to completely change the mud to drill through a particular subsurface layer. As drilling proceeds, the mud engineer will get information from other service providers such as the mud logger (
mud logging technician) about progress through the geological zones, and will make regular physical and chemical checks on the
drilling mud. In particular the
Marsh funnel viscosity and the
density are frequently checked. As drilling proceeds, the mud tends to accumulate small particles of the rocks which are being drilled through, and its properties change. It is the job of the mud engineer to specify additives to correct these changes, or to partially or wholly replace the mud when necessary. He or she must also keep an eye on the equipment which is used to pump the mud and to remove particles, and be prepared if the geologists' predictions are not entirely correct, or if other problems arise. It is sometimes necessary to stabilize the wall of a borehole at a particular depth by pumping cement down through the mud system, and the mud engineer is sometimes in charge of this process. The mud engineer is well supported by the mud supply company with computer aids and manuals dealing with all known problems and their solution, but it is his or her responsibility to get it right in a situation where mistakes can be very costly indeed. A mud engineer's job may involve long shifts of over 12 hours a day. Typical offshore and foreign work schedules are four weeks working and four weeks off. ==Important fluid properties==