Bulletin 233 Protection of Oil and Gas Field Equipment Against Corrosion

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 154
- File Size:
- 13067 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1925
Abstract
Rapid deterioration and destruction of metal equipment in oil and
gas fields cause waste of resources and financial losses that must be
lessened or eliminated if operations in many important fields are to
continue profitable. The magnitude of this destruction is proved
by the huge consumption of iron and steel pipe, tubing, casing, pump
valves, and sucker rods to replace worn-out equipment, and by the
amount of such equipment that is left in wells or junked. (See PI. I,
A and B, and PI. II, A and B, and Fig. 14, p. 61.) This destruction
of equipment constitu~es in itself a serious waste, but contingent production
troubles, such as underground leakage of oil through defective
tubing and pumps, and the consequent loss of oil and gas because
of damage to pay sands by infiltrating water and silt, frequent
and costly repairs with necessary suspension of production, and the
ultimate injury to or loss of valuable wells, often cancel all operating
profits.
Many of these troubles result from rapid destruction of metal
equipment by corrosive waters. The strata penetrated by the wells
usually contain saline waters. Certain types of these waters, with
their associated gases, are intensely corrosive; they attack well casing
or tubing so vigorously as to riddle it with holes, rendering it
useless in a few years or even a few months or weeks after it is installed.
Pump plungers, working barrels, balls and seats of valves,
and screen pipe, as well as lead lines and other surface equipment,
are ruined with equal rapidity. The development and application of
practical methods to retard or prevent this corrosion are among the
most urgent problems of the oil and gas industry.
Although much progress has been made in preventing the corrosion
of metals, the need for reducing the damage from corrosion
in oil and gas fields is still imperative. This is especially true of
underground corrosion in the wells, because underground conditions
favor corrosion and are difficult to study; hence they have not been
thoroughly understood. In efforts to stop ~amage to oil and gas field equipment by corrosion,
numerous methods have been proposed or tried with varying
success. Some of these methods are cheap and effective. However,
it is surprising that in many important fields the damage by corrosion
is accepted as necessary or unavoidable, although cheap and
effective methods that have been developed and successfully tried
elsewhere might greatly reduce the trouble or eliminate it.
This bulletin describes common causes and effects of oil and gas
field corrosion and outlines methods of abating the damage. In order
to accomplish this purpose best, the writer has avoided taking sides
in controversies between the advocates of different metals for oil-field
use; instead he describes the methods of combating corrosion in the
various fields and suggests experiments that may yield valuable
results. Throughout the paper he has freely used information from
published reports of other investigators.
Citation
APA:
(1925) Bulletin 233 Protection of Oil and Gas Field Equipment Against CorrosionMLA: Bulletin 233 Protection of Oil and Gas Field Equipment Against Corrosion. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1925.