RI 3657 Productivity of Oil Wells & Inherent Influence of Gas: Oil Ratios and Water Saturation

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. V. Higgins
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
59
File Size:
3841 KB
Publication Date:
Sep 1, 1942

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION When nations throughout the world are pitted against each other in a war in which petroleum plays a major role, scientist and engineers of the petroleum industry must give serious thought to ways and means for recover¬ing greater percentages of oil from natural reservoirs than in the past. Petroleum and its products are vital to highly mechanized modern warfare, and the victorious nations will be those whose armies, navies, and air forces are supplied with adequate fuel oil, gasoline, and lubricants until the war is won.Efficient recovery of oil from underground reservoirs depends on many interrelated techniques; evaluation of the producing performance of wells upon the basis of their productivity indexes is one such tool. Oil wells usually yield oil at a maximum rate when first ""brought in"". The rate of production begins to decline soon after the first oil is delivered to the tanks, and although part of the decline usually can be attributed to natural reduction of reservoir pressure as oil and as are withdrawn from the reservoir, a larger proportion frequently is caused by greater saturation of water and as in the producing formation about wells and clogging of the pores of the sands by silt, organic salt, and insoluble hydrocarbons. If the maximum quantity of oil is to be recovered from reservoir sands and rocks by wells, it is then imperative that the ability of wells to produce oil be watched closely and all adverse influences that affect the case with which oil can flow to wells be corrected if possible."
Citation

APA: R. V. Higgins  (1942)  RI 3657 Productivity of Oil Wells & Inherent Influence of Gas: Oil Ratios and Water Saturation

MLA: R. V. Higgins RI 3657 Productivity of Oil Wells & Inherent Influence of Gas: Oil Ratios and Water Saturation. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1942.

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