RI 5424 Cable-Tool Coring With Oil-Base Mud In Appalachian Oilfields ? Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
W. T. Wertman
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
56
File Size:
22698 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1958

Abstract

A research program to aid development of better and more efficient methods for producing petroleum and increasing its ultimate recovery from underground formations is an integral part of the work of the Bureau of Mines on conservation of the Nation's natural resources. Economic, efficient production of recoverable oil and gas from a reservoir depends to a great extent upon the best and most accurate information that can be obtained from a study of the reservoir rock and its fluid contents. Information on oil and water saturation is pertinent and essential in wildcat, extension, and pool wells for good reservoir operations and prediction of performance. This report presents results of an investigation by the Bureau of Mines of core recovery and degree of drilling-fluid contamination occurring during cable-tool coring operations using oil-base mud. Representative core samples were obtained from 6 major oil-producing sands in 8 fields of West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New York. Field-mixed, oil-base drilling mud was used for the first coring test, and lightweight, premixed oil-base mud, with an organic chloride tracer added, was used in coring eight other wells. Tracer analyses were made to determine contamination of core by drilling-fluid filtrate. Core analyses, including oil and water content and minimum interstitial water-saturation tests, were made on selected core samples to compare and evaluate water saturations determined by the two methods.
Citation

APA: W. T. Wertman  (1958)  RI 5424 Cable-Tool Coring With Oil-Base Mud In Appalachian Oilfields ? Summary

MLA: W. T. Wertman RI 5424 Cable-Tool Coring With Oil-Base Mud In Appalachian Oilfields ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1958.

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