Engineering Research - Significance of the Critical Phenomena in Oil and Gas Production (T. P. 971)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
D. L. Katz C. C. Singleterry
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
17
File Size:
641 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1939

Abstract

The critical phenomena have been studied during the past century but our knowledge of the critical temperatures and pressures of complex hydrocarbon mixtures still is very limited. The critical temperatures and pressures of pure substances have been examined in large numbers120 and in great detail.11.17 No experimental determinations of the critical phenomena have been reported on such complex hydrocarbon systems as a reservoir fluid. The critical temperature is defined by Taylor18 as follows: "there is some temperature for each gas above which the gas cannot be liquefied. This temperature is called the critical temperature." The critical pressure of a pure substance is the vapor pressure at the critical temperature. It should be noted that these definitions refer to a given substance in the pure state and do not mean that the pure substance cannot be liquefied in the presence of a second constituent. The normal procedure for obtaining the critical temperature of a substance is to heat it in a glass tube 1,20 under pressure until the meniscus between the liquid and vapor phase disappears, although other methods, especially for mixtures, have been used.13,14 However, when considering oil and gas reservoirs, it is more enlightening to consider a critical phenomenon that occurs when a mixture of oil and gas are compressed at a reservoir temperature until the meniscus disappears because the two phases become equal in composition. This conception, along with erroneous applications of the definition of the critical phenomena of a pure substance to that pure substance when it is part of a complex mixture, has caused confusion even among persons familiar with the classical theories. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the critical phenomena of pure substances and mixtures and to report experimental data on a mixture of
Citation

APA: D. L. Katz C. C. Singleterry  (1939)  Engineering Research - Significance of the Critical Phenomena in Oil and Gas Production (T. P. 971)

MLA: D. L. Katz C. C. Singleterry Engineering Research - Significance of the Critical Phenomena in Oil and Gas Production (T. P. 971). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1939.

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