RI 2442 The Use of Vapor-Tight Tankage in the Oil Fields

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 16
- File Size:
- 3566 KB
- Publication Date:
- Feb 1, 1923
Abstract
The policy of buying crude oil on a gravity basis , recently instituted by
the major crude oil purchasing agencies in the Mid- Continent field , has caused a
new and vital interest to be taken in the work of the U. S. Bureau of Mines for
preventing evaporation of crude . From the early years of the industry oil men
have recognized that the gravity of crude oil is usually an index of the gasoline
content , but it has not been so generally known that the gravity of the crude oil
decreases if evaporation is permitted .
In 1919 the Bureau of Mines began a survey to determine the evaporation
losses of crude petroleum in its various stages of handling from the well to the
refinery , The results of this study are presented in Bulletin 200 ( Wiggins , J.H. ,
Evaporation losses of petroleum in the Mid- Continent Field , Bulletin 200 , U. s .
Bureau of Mines , 1922. ) and Bulletin 225 ( Wiggins , J.H. , Methods of decreasing
evaporation losses of petroleum , Bulletin 225 , U. S. Bureau of Mines , ( In press )
The findings of this survey were so startling that soon after the preliminary
report had been published , several tank companies began manufacturing
vapor- tight tanks for the purpose of reducing these important losses . Since that
time the development of this type of apparatus has been so rapid that today , every
oil trade journal carries numerous advertisements of vapor- tight tanks and equipment
as well as technical articles dealing with various problems in connection with
the elimination of evaporation losses , whereas three or four years ago the subject
was scarcely even thought of.
The present report has been prepared in response to numerous requests for
information on the apparatus actually being used to prevent evaporation losses .
At this time oil operators are also extremely interested in holding the lighter
fractions in the crude oil in order to prevent a lowering in gravity . The practice
of removing the vapors from crude- oil tanks by means of a slight vacuum and extracting
the gasoline from them is not discussed here .
Citation
APA:
(1923) RI 2442 The Use of Vapor-Tight Tankage in the Oil FieldsMLA: RI 2442 The Use of Vapor-Tight Tankage in the Oil Fields. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1923.