RI 2159 Bureau of Mines Method for Determining Water In Petroleum

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
E. W. Dean W. A. Jacob
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
3
File Size:
1354 KB
Publication Date:
Sep 1, 1920

Abstract

The Pittsburgh petroleum laboratory of the Bureau of lines has recently developed an improved method for the determination of water in pctroleum emulsions. It has been described in detail in an article entitled "A convenient method for the determination of water in petroloum and other organic emulsions" by E. W. Dean and D. D. Stark (Jour. Ind., and Enc. Chem. Vol. 12, ſay, 1920, page 436). It is essentially a modification of the familiar procedure of "distillation with an iniscible solvent", the improvement consisting in the use of apparatus that is rºck more convenient than any previously employed. The method has been used with marked success in the Bureau's laboratories for a period of about a year and has also been tried with equal satisfaction by a number of other laboratories. It has been most extensively employed for determining the water content of heavy fuel oils but has been applied also to several other types of emulsions, including shale oils, tars derived from coal, greases, and mixtures of powdered coal, oil and water. The Bureau has received a number of requests for information regarding commercial sources for the apparatus used, and having been assured of the value of the method, has taken steps to render it available for general use. - The equipment is, with the exception of two items, made of parts that are obtainable from the ordinary stock of chemical supply houses. The two exceptions are (1) the so-called "distilling tube receiver" and (2) the electric heater. The former is an essential part of the equipment; the latter is a convenient ac cessory but it can if necessary be roplaced by a gas burner. Efforts on the part of the Bureau staff to ronder these two items of apparatus available for purchase from supply houses, or for production by the user are hero described.
Citation

APA: E. W. Dean W. A. Jacob  (1920)  RI 2159 Bureau of Mines Method for Determining Water In Petroleum

MLA: E. W. Dean W. A. Jacob RI 2159 Bureau of Mines Method for Determining Water In Petroleum. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1920.

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