RI 2313 Soludility of Oil Shales in Solvents for Petroleum

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Martin J. Gavin John T. Aydelotte
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
4
File Size:
1064 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1922

Abstract

" Oil shale contains little or no oil as such , but it contains an organic material from which oil may be produced by destructive distillation" . This statement , or others conveying the same meaning, appears in many popular and techni cal articles on oil shale . It is based on the belief that the ordinary solvents of petroleum have but little action on the organic substances contained in oil- yielding shales , although on distillation these same shales may yield upwards of 50 gallons of crude shale oil per ton . A 50 - gallon shale thus yields by distillation 18.73 per cent of its weight as oil ( assuming the specific gravity of the oil to be 0.900 ) , although only a relatively small part of this can be recovered by extraction with such solvents as chloroform , carbon tetrachloride , and the like . In the course of certain experiments designed to determine the solubilities of different shales after they had begun to yield oil by distillation , it was found desirable to determine the quantity dissolved from certain unheated shales by various solvents , at or near the boiling points of these solvents . The method used and results obtained are presented below. These experiments were made in connection with the oil - shale investigations being conducted by the U. S. Bureau of Mines , in cooperation with the States of Colorado and Utah .
Citation

APA: Martin J. Gavin John T. Aydelotte  (1922)  RI 2313 Soludility of Oil Shales in Solvents for Petroleum

MLA: Martin J. Gavin John T. Aydelotte RI 2313 Soludility of Oil Shales in Solvents for Petroleum. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1922.

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