Increasing the Extraction of Oil - Factors Influencing Recovery of Petroleum from Unconsolidated Sands by Water-flooding (with Discussion)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 18
- File Size:
- 740 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1928
Abstract
During recent years, oil producers have observed with interest the practical success which has attended the application of water as a medium for displacement of oil from its reservoir sands in the Bradford field of northern Pennsylvania and southern New York. Here, according to various authorities, additional recoveries of frorn 2,000 to 12,000 bhl. of oil per acre have heen secured by this method, after ordinary flowing and pumping. rnethods of production had practically reached the lower limit of economic operation. Notwithstanding the success which has attended the practical use of the flooding process in the Bradford field, oil producers in other regions are skeptical of its value when applied under physical conditions differing markedly from those which characterizc the Bradford field. Its usc would probably he construed as illegal in most of the oil-producing states. This general relnctance on the part of oil producers in other regions to accept the flooding process is due in large part to lack of infor-n~ation regarding the factors that influence its operation and efficiency. With the purpose of clarifying to some extent the issues involved, and of determining when the flooding proccess may or may not beeffee-tivcly ernployed, the writers have conducted a serics of laboratory exper-imentments under carefully controlled conditions, designed to indicate, the influence of various physical, chemical arid lithologic factors. These experments have not been conducted under conditions identical with those which exist at depths far below the earth's surface, so that direct quantitative comparisons with field results are not justified, hut it is believed that the experimental results at least warrant qualitative inter-pretations that may he applied to field conditions. The methods employed in the conduct of these experiments are briefly explained, and the results, together with the conclusions based thereon, arc presented. FactoRs Influencing Displacement of Oil froM SaNdS by WAteR- flooding Before presenting the experimental data, it, will he desirable to con-sider the manner in which the residual oil is retained within the oil sand
Citation
APA:
(1928) Increasing the Extraction of Oil - Factors Influencing Recovery of Petroleum from Unconsolidated Sands by Water-flooding (with Discussion)MLA: Increasing the Extraction of Oil - Factors Influencing Recovery of Petroleum from Unconsolidated Sands by Water-flooding (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1928.