RI 2157 Factos in Determining the Gasoline Content in Natural Gas by the Absorption Method

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 1908 KB
- Publication Date:
- Aug 1, 1920
Abstract
"In the natural-gas Gasoline industry, the methods used in determining the amount of gasoline in natural gas are many and varied; they include the specific-gravity test, laboratory tests involving absorption, charge in volume of the gas or in the absorption medium, absorption in charcoal with subsequent distillation, compression of the gas which results in the condensation of the gasoline, and the absorption of the gasoline vapors in an absorption oil, from which the gasoline is distilled and measured. Each of these various tests has advantages, and disadvantages. It is however, conceded in the industry that the tests in which the gasoline is obtained and measured as such are the more reliable.This paper deals with certain factors which should be considered in making absorption tests using ""mineral seal oil"" as an absorbent; this method of testing is widely used not only in the field, but in control work in absorption gasoline plants where the gasoline content of the intake and discharge gas is determined daily. In control work it is frequently found that the plant produces more gasoline than the tests show, which gives the plant the appearance of making more gasoline than is actually present in the gas treated, or in other words operating at more than one hundred per cent efficiency. Obviously then, the tests as made in these cases are in error, and in hope of correcting some of these variances, the following factors have been studied at the U. S. Bureau of Mines petroleum station at Bartlesville, Oklahoma."
Citation
APA:
(1920) RI 2157 Factos in Determining the Gasoline Content in Natural Gas by the Absorption MethodMLA: RI 2157 Factos in Determining the Gasoline Content in Natural Gas by the Absorption Method. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1920.