Technical Notes - Vaporization of Hydrocarbons from an Unconsolidated Sand

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Charles W. Oxford R. L. Huntington
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
364 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1953

Abstract

During the past 20 years (1932-1952), many condensate reservoirs have been discovered in the United States, particularly in the Gulf Coast region. Most of these reservoirs have been produced by a combination of gas cycling and slow pressure depletion in order to recover the liquefiable components from the single-phase fluids originally existing within the Although a record of the composition of the produced fluids has been kept on some of these reservoirs, very little laboratory work has been done on small scale replicas so as to obtain some idea of the effect of such variables as fluid flow withdrawal and cycling rates, pressure, temperature, percentage of liquid hydrocarbon and water saturation within the reservoir. Weinaug and Cordell have shown experimentally that condensates can be revaporized within a sand reservoir; however, they studied only the effect of fluid withdrawal rate. In this investigation the above mentioned variables were studied experimentally in small scale reservoirs both in the case of vaporization of condensate by batchwise pressure deple-
Citation

APA: Charles W. Oxford R. L. Huntington  (1953)  Technical Notes - Vaporization of Hydrocarbons from an Unconsolidated Sand

MLA: Charles W. Oxford R. L. Huntington Technical Notes - Vaporization of Hydrocarbons from an Unconsolidated Sand. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1953.

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