RI 3493 Application Of Well-Test Data To The Study Of A Specific Gas-Production Problem ? Introduction (bb8e0ca1-fa72-4d59-a9c1-4b0f53003793)

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
M. A. Schellhardt
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
35
File Size:
13347 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

In recent years development of instruments and equipment for determining subsurface pressures and temperatures in. gas and oil wells has made it feasible to obtain information that eras not available in the past on many gas-production problems. The material presented in this report illustrates particularly the value of subsurface-temperature data in the study of subsurface leakage from gas wells. An abnormal decline in the shut-in pressure of the Lone Star Gasoline Co. A. Jones No. 1 gas well in the southern part of the Buffalo (Tex.) field was observed during an interval when a negligible volume of gas bras being withdrawn from the reservoir. Wellhead-pressure readings indicated that the shut-in pressure of the well declined from 2,295 pounds per square inch gage on February 3, 1937, to. 1,445 on February 12, 1935. Tests conducted by engineers of the Lone Star Gas Co. suggested that the subnormal pressure gaged on February 12, 1938, probably was not caused by a head of liquid in the well.
Citation

APA: M. A. Schellhardt  (1940)  RI 3493 Application Of Well-Test Data To The Study Of A Specific Gas-Production Problem ? Introduction (bb8e0ca1-fa72-4d59-a9c1-4b0f53003793)

MLA: M. A. Schellhardt RI 3493 Application Of Well-Test Data To The Study Of A Specific Gas-Production Problem ? Introduction (bb8e0ca1-fa72-4d59-a9c1-4b0f53003793). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1940.

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