Drilling and Production Equipment, Methods and Materials - Pilot Gas Injection - Its Conduct and Criteria for Evaluation

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Lincoln F. Elkins John T. Cooke
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
9
File Size:
536 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1949

Abstract

Injection of gas to increase oil recovery has been considered for almost all important discoveries during the past ten or fifteen years. However, the number of gas injection projects having sufficient history and data is too limited to permit valid generalities of effectiveness of gas injection. Management and engineers are faced with a difficult problem of selecting those reservoirs which are susceptible to profitable application of gas injection. Injection of gas to maintain high pressure favors some factors affecting reservoir performance such as viscosity, surface tension, and formation volume factor of oil by keeping gas in solution and favors some operating features such as extending flowing life of wells and storing part of the produced gas for future use or sales. Injection of gas at low pressure involves lower compression ratio, or at least a single gas-gathering system, larger displacement volume in the reservoir per unit of gas handled, and permits effective utilization of the naturally existing energy and agent for oil displacement that is gas dissolved in oil. Each program is thus a compromise to meet optimum economic conditions while striving to attain maximum recovery of this important nautral resource. The statement has often been made that pressure maintenance would greatly increase oil recovery by permitting abandonment of formation oil inflated with gas in solution rather than abandonment of the same liquid volume of tank oil, if the same terminal oil saturation could be attained. Simple calculations indicate increases in oil recov- ery as high as one hundred per cent on this basis for high formation volume factor oil encountered in current deep drilling. Important in this statement is "if the same terminal oil saturation could be attained." Implicit in this statement are the requirement of physical
Citation

APA: Lincoln F. Elkins John T. Cooke  (1949)  Drilling and Production Equipment, Methods and Materials - Pilot Gas Injection - Its Conduct and Criteria for Evaluation

MLA: Lincoln F. Elkins John T. Cooke Drilling and Production Equipment, Methods and Materials - Pilot Gas Injection - Its Conduct and Criteria for Evaluation. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1949.

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