RI 4690 Secondary Recovery Of Oil By Air And Gas Injection In The Brenneman Field Hancock County, W. Va.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Tignor E. M.
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
42
File Size:
14972 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1950

Abstract

The Brenneman oil field in Grant District, Hancock County, W. VA., was selected for study by Bureau of Mines engineers because it was typical of many of the smaller petroleum reservoirs in the Appalachian region. In 1906, E. W. Marland & Co. discovered the Brenneman field by drilling a well that readied the oil-bearing .Berea sandstone at a depth of 750 feet and initially produced 200 barrels of oil a day. Most of the oil-productive area (348 acres) of the field was developed in a comparatively short time, and the initial daily production rates of some of the wells were as high as 1,000 barrels of oil a day. Although the field was a prolific producer of oil for several years, it was abandoned in 1923 when the production rate was less than 1,000 barrels of oil a year and 705,000 barrels of oil had been produced. Secondary-recovery operations were started in the Brenneman field in 1927 after useable old wells had been repaired and unsatisfactory wells had been plugged; drilling of new wells was started in 1929. The peak of the redevelopment program was reached in 1942 when 92 oil-producing wells and 26 injection wells were in use; both air And mixtures of air and natural gas were used for injection purposes. It is estimated that approximately 357,000 barrels of oil, equivalent to 1,030 barrels per acre, 105 barrels per acre-foot, 8.5 percent of the total pore volume, or 11.9 percent of the original oil in place will be produced as a result of gas-injection secondary-recovery operations. Engineers of the Bureau of Mines Petroleum Field Office, Franklin, Pa., are studying secondary-recovery projects in the Appalachian region as a part, of the Bureau's secondary recovery research and are reporting these studies so that others: can profit by the experience gained from the operations. In common with most of the other Appalachian oil fields, there was no natural water drive in the Brenneman field. The estimated oil saturation in the Brenneman reservoir at the end of economic gas-injection operation indicates that additional oil might be recovered economically by water flooding and that a pilot flood would be warranted.
Citation

APA: Tignor E. M.  (1950)  RI 4690 Secondary Recovery Of Oil By Air And Gas Injection In The Brenneman Field Hancock County, W. Va.

MLA: Tignor E. M. RI 4690 Secondary Recovery Of Oil By Air And Gas Injection In The Brenneman Field Hancock County, W. Va.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.

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