Search Documents

Search Again

Search Again

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear
Organization
Organization

Sort by

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Hazelton Paper - A Gas Reheating Furnace

    By W. A. Sweet

    The furnace I am now about to describe was designed to obtain and maintain very high temperature. Knowing the cost of the gas furnace that was in successful operation here and abroad, I approached the

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - A Comparison between Certain English and Certain American Blast Furnaces as to their Capacity by Measurement and their Capacity by Weight

    By Frank Firmstone

    IN Chemical Phenomena of Iron Iron Smelting, Mr. Bell gives the weight of materials required to fill furnaces of various sizes at the Clarence Works ; as this differs very much from the weight require

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering–Laboratory Research - Cellar Oil

    By M. H. Gaskell, D. C. Lindley

    Small, steeply inclined reservoirs without natural water drives often are found associated with salt domes or other highly faulted structures. Frequently, only one well may be economically justified i

  • AIME
    Secondary Recovery and Pressure Maintenance - Oil Recovery in Five-Spot Pilot Flood

    By B. H. Caudle, L. G. Loncarie

    Pilot flooding is one method of evaluating a proposed secondary recovery project. However, the amount and rate of oil recovery from an unconfined pilot area is not usually the same as from an equal ar

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering–General - Effect of Bank Size on Oil Recovery in the High-Pressure Gas-Driven LPG-Bank Process

    By J. W. Lacey, F. H. Brinkman, J. E. Faris

    This paper presents an analysis of the high-pressure, gas-driven LPG-slug process, based on fluid flow tests in areal models. Two types of tests were made. One series was made in low-pressure models w

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering–Laboratory Research - Laboratory Studies of Oil Recovery by Injection

    By V. V. Valleroy, A. J. Cornelius, B. T. Willman, G. W. Runberg, L. W. Powers

    This paper reports the results of an investigation into the use of steam as a recovery agent. High oil recoveries by steam, as much as 100 per cent greater than by water flood, were demonstrated in

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Model Studies for Production-Injection Well Conversion During Line-Drive Water Floods

    By G. T. Pruitt, T. L. Irby, P. B. Crawford, H. Ferrell

    In water flooding peripheral, center-to-edge, line-drive or water-encroachment patterns the question has arisen, "when should a producing well be converted to a water-injection well?". It is realized

  • AIME
    NEW Haven Paper - Progress of the Silver-Lead Metallurgy of the West during 1874

    By A. Eilers

    The year 1874 marks a decided advance in the metallurgy of the West, in two directions. On the one hand, the technical management has been very materially improved, and on the other, the production ha

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Drilling – Equipment, Methods and Materials - A Copper Ion Displacement Test for Screening Corrosion Inhibitors

    By William B. Hughes

    The rubber-sleeve core barrel was developed to improve core recovery from unconsolidated sands, where it is most difficult to obtain cores with conventional barrels. The use of a rubber-sleeve core re

  • AIME
    Pipelining – Equipment, Methods and Materials - On the Flow of Bingham Plastic Slurries in Pipes and Between Parallel Plates

    By D. R. Pratt, R. W. Hanks

    The method of Caldwell and Babbitt for detennining Bingham plastic rheological constants from engineering pipe flow data has been erroneously used in many previous applications. A reanalysis of extens

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - A Numerical Solution of the Linear Displacement Equation with C...

    By R. H. Jacoby, V. J. Berry, R. C. Koeller

    The experimental phase behavior of several field gas-condensate systems, one field volatile oil system, and a series of synthetic systems having gas-oil ratios from 2,000 to 20,000 scf/bbl stock tank

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - Unsteady-State Liquid Flow Through Porous Media Having Elliptic...

    By F. W. Jessen, N. Mungan

    The plastic flow characteristics of clay water suspensions were first recognized by Binghaml in 1916 and further studied by Ambrose and Loomis' in 1931-1932. Many physical and chemical properties

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-General - The Behavior of Naturally Fractured Reservoirs

    By P. J. Root, J. E. Warren

    An idealized model has been developed for the purpose of studying the characteristic behavior of a permeable medium which contains regions which contribute significantly to the pore volume of the syst

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-General - Inference Between Oil Fields

    By W. Hurst

    What is entailed here is the extension of the sinzplified material balance formulas to encompass interference between oil fields. As previously reported, the ex-plicitness as so revealed for the cunzu

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering – General - Profitability of Capital Expenditures for Development Drilling and Producing Property Appraisal

    By J. J. Arps

    n approach to the study of the electrical properlies of drilling muds, their cakes and their filtrates was made by treating the drilling fluid as a porous medium. Lluring this study it was found that

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - A Study of Anomalons Pressure Build-up Behavior

    By C. S. Matthews, G. L. Stegemeier

    In one field in South Texas, approximately 72 per cent of the pressure build-up results show a characteris-i.rtic "hump" (i.e., the pressure builds up and then falls off) which makes interpretation by

  • AIME
    Drilling-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Efforts to Develop Improved Oilwell Drilling Methods

    By L. W. Legerwood

    During the past three decades, the oil industry has expended increasing eflorts seeking improved drilling tools or systems to reduce drilling costs. The total cost of these efforts is unknown, but it