New York Paper - Significance of Fluid Level in Oil-well Pumping

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Lester C. Uren
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
14
File Size:
565 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1925

Abstract

It is realized that the depth of fluid maintained in a pumping well is sometimes influenced by other considerations than the quantity of fluid that will enter the well: the prevention of sand incursion, prevention of waste of natural gas, and the maintenance of a suitable submergence for the pump, for example. These latter factors have an important influence on the productivity of the well, so that otherwise unwarranted fluid levels must sometimes be maintained to offset them; but where the handling of unconsolidated sands is not a problem of consequence and where water has been properly excluded, the principles developed here and the practices recommended should apply. The principal objective of the producer should be to produce the maximum quantity of oil in the shortest possible time. Any method or equipment that will increase the rate of production during the early years of the life of the well, when gas pressure is high, will greatly augment the ultimate production. The maintenance of a proper fluid level in the well at all times will go far toward accomplishing this desired result. For a given set of conditions surrounding the flow of oil into a particular well, in which the viscosity of the oil, the porosity and grain size of the sand, and the diameter of the well appear as constants, two variables determine the quantity of oil that will flow from the sand into the well. These are: the effective pressure behind or within the oil in the reservoir sand, and the fluid level maintained within the well. The former is the expulsive force that causes movement of oil from the sand into the well, while the latter determines the magnitude of a resisting force opposing such movement. The first of these factors is largely beyond the control of the oil producer, but it is in his interest to reduce the opposing force to the lowest economic limit.
Citation

APA: Lester C. Uren  (1925)  New York Paper - Significance of Fluid Level in Oil-well Pumping

MLA: Lester C. Uren New York Paper - Significance of Fluid Level in Oil-well Pumping. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1925.

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