RI 3869 Recovery & Utilization of Oil From Oil Field Waste Emulsion

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 30
- File Size:
- 1709 KB
- Publication Date:
- Mar 1, 1946
Abstract
"A successful procedure for the recovery of a valuable product from weathered tank-bottom settlings has been developed in the laboratories of the Bureau of lines and used in a field pilot plant. These heavy emulsion settlings, generally regarded by the industry as waste material, have usually been drained into open pits or storage ponds and eventually destroyed.Laboratory examination of the waste material shows it to consist essentially of a ""water-in-oil"" emulsion containing a considerable volume of congealed ""paraffin."" This paraffin is mainly high-melting-point wax; known in the industry as microcrystalline wax, for which there is an increasing demand.Because of the physical properties of this wax, the tank-bottom settlings are not responsive to conventional methods used for demulsifying ordinary crude-oil emulsions.The work upon which this report is based was conducted by the Bureau of Mines in cooperation with -the Kansas State. Board of Health and with special cooperative agreements-with the Cities Service Oil Co, Bartlesville, Okla., and the Bareco Oil Co,. Barnsdall, Okla. The studies were made under the general supervision of R. A. Cattell, chief engineer, Petroleum and Natural-Gas Division, Bureau of Mines, Washington; D. C., and H. C. Fowler, supervising engineer, Petroleum Experiment Station, Bureau of Mines, Bartlesville, Okla., and under the direct supervision of Ludwig Schmidt, senior petroleum engineer, Bureau of Mines, Bartlesville, Okla.Gratefully acknowledged are the assistance and cooperation given by the Cities Service Oil Co. of Oklahoma and especially by M. J. Kirwan, manager of production, and by Q. E. Beecher, general superintendent of production, Bartlesville, Okla., and to members of their staff at Oil Hill, Kans.The assistance and suggestions of V. R. Oakley, general superintendent, E. R. Wiles, director of research, L. G. Willis, field engineer in charge crude-oil supply, and Gerald DeWalt, chief chemist, and his staff of the Bareco Oil Co., Barnsdall, Okla., were of much value in the laboratory and recovery work."
Citation
APA:
(1946) RI 3869 Recovery & Utilization of Oil From Oil Field Waste EmulsionMLA: RI 3869 Recovery & Utilization of Oil From Oil Field Waste Emulsion. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1946.