Use Of Gas Meters For Determination Of Pay Strata In Oil Sands

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. V. Millikan
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
13
File Size:
667 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 9, 1925

Abstract

When a flowing oil well is being drilled in with cable tools, it is difficult to determine when an additional streak of pay sand is drilled. By placing a gas meter on the gas-release line from the oil and gas separator, any increase in volume of gas that comes with oil production is recorded. In addition to the better knowledge of sand conditions, these data are a valuable aid in determining the size and depth of shots, plugging off water, and estimating ultimate production. The meter also gives a record of operation while the well is drilling in; and if allowed to remain on the well after completion will give information that may lead to a more efficient recovery of the oil from the sand. A VERTICAL cross section of any oil sand will show great variation in porosity and oil content. In some sands, the entire thickness contains oil, the variation being only the degree of porosity or oil content, but more often the pay streaks are distinctly separated by shells or barren streaks. These pay strata vary in number and may be thin or thick. The total thickness of the sand may be several tens of feet while the part containing oil may be only 1 or 2 ft. thick. The amount of production is not proportional to the thickness of the sand but rather the thickness of the pay streaks. If the total thickness of the sand or the amount that can be drilled is small, or if the initial production is small, the depth at which each stratum of pay is encountered can be determined sufficiently accurately for all present economic purposes. However, when drilling through sand of considerable thickness, giving large initial production, especially where conditions necessitate that the production go through the same gas trap with that from one or more wells already producing, it is difficult to determine the depth at which the pay strata are encountered even accurately enough to guide the placing of shots, and small pay streaks are apt not to be recognized at all.
Citation

APA: C. V. Millikan  (1925)  Use Of Gas Meters For Determination Of Pay Strata In Oil Sands

MLA: C. V. Millikan Use Of Gas Meters For Determination Of Pay Strata In Oil Sands. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1925.

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