RI 3481 Bureau Of Mines - A.P.I. Pressure Core Barrell - Progress Report On Its Design And Development

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
D. B. Taliaferro R. E. Heithecker
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
27
File Size:
11069 KB
Publication Date:
Nov 1, 1939

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION Recovery of core specimens from subsurface formations and their subsequent analysis are important aids in efficient development and operation of oil and gas fields. Gore specimens first were obtained mainly for the geologic information they revealed; now they are analyzed to determine many of the physical characteristics and conditions of the subsurface formations as well. Cores recovered from the producing formations may be analyzed for porosity, permeability, oil content, ""connate"" water content, and other physical and chemical properties of the formation, all to the end of furnishing enough data for making reliable estimates of the quantity and avail¬ability of oil and as within a reservoir and in devising efficient means for their withdrawal.Examination of bottom-hole samples of oil gives valuable information concerning the amount of gas in solution in the oil within the reservoir and the resultant shrinkage of the oil when the gas is released. Producing characteristics of reservoirs nay be determined by means of subsurface pressure and temperature gages and measurements male at the wellhead; however, unless reliable core analyses are available, these data have only limited use in any quantitative study of reserves. In such a study the quantity of oil, gas, and water contained in a unit volume of the reservoir formation is extremely important. Although reliable methods of analyzing cores have been developed and the data thus obtained are valuable, their applications become more limited or reservoirs at higher temperatures and pressures are discovered. This condition results almost entirely from the fact that in recovering a core from a formation of high pressure and temperature by present methods a large part of the fluid content of the core is lost or contaminated to an unknown extent. For a number of years most petroleum engineers have held that if this loss and contamination of the fluid content of a core were eliminated, the value of core analyses would be increased greatly."
Citation

APA: D. B. Taliaferro R. E. Heithecker  (1939)  RI 3481 Bureau Of Mines - A.P.I. Pressure Core Barrell - Progress Report On Its Design And Development

MLA: D. B. Taliaferro R. E. Heithecker RI 3481 Bureau Of Mines - A.P.I. Pressure Core Barrell - Progress Report On Its Design And Development. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1939.

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