RI 3535 A Method For Determining The Water Content Of Oil Sands ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
D. B. Taliaferro
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
13
File Size:
5228 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

An accurate knowledge of the water content of oil-bearing sands4/ now is recognized as an important factor in calculations of the flow of oil through the sands to producing wells and in the estimation of oil reserves. To this end the Bureau of Mines laboratories are using a method that is an adaptation of the A. S. T. M. method of determining the water content of petroleum products (1).5/ However, the apparatus and technique have been altered slightly, as described in this report, to increase the precision of the method without affecting the simplicity of procedure or speed with which determinations may be made. Until recently petroleum engineers, when estimating reserves assumed that the entire pore volume of the oil-saturated parts of producing sands was filled with oil, as it was generally thought that the oil, water, and gas in any formation had separated completely during geologic time into distinct layers because of their difference in density. In 1929 Lindthrop and Nickolaeff (12) reported experimental results from which they concluded that 22 to 30 percent of the pore volume of producing sands in the Grozay district, Russia, was filled with water when the fields were discovered. Since that time numerous investigators (5, 7, 8, 10) have found evidence of water in the sands of now oil-producing fields and old fields that never produced water with the oil.
Citation

APA: D. B. Taliaferro  (1940)  RI 3535 A Method For Determining The Water Content Of Oil Sands ? Introduction

MLA: D. B. Taliaferro RI 3535 A Method For Determining The Water Content Of Oil Sands ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1940.

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