RI 4716 Effect Of Oil-Base Drilling Fluid Filtrate On Analysis Of Cores From South Coles Levee, Calif., And Rangely, Colo. Fields

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 49
- File Size:
- 4871 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1950
Abstract
It is generally recognized that if the lose and contamination of the fluid content of a core specimen from an oil- and gas-bearing formation in a well were eliminated, the value of core analysis would be increased greatly. In an effort to obtain uncontaminated cores, extensive field tests were carried out in the Mercy field, San Jacinto County, Tex., with the Carter pressure core barrel and an oil-base drilling fluid having very low rates of filtration as measured by the standard A.P.I. drilling-fluid filter teat. A tracer was added to the drilling fluid filter test. A tracer was added to the drilling fluid to provide a means for quantitatively measuring the volume of oil filtrate in the cores. Unfortunately, as stated in the report on the Mercy tests, very little oil nand was penetrated in coring the well; and because the performance of the pressure core barrel was not entirely satisfactory, the tests did not provide a complete answer to the question: Does a filtrate from an oil-base drilling fluid enter cores., and how does it affect the results of the core analyses?
Citation
APA:
(1950) RI 4716 Effect Of Oil-Base Drilling Fluid Filtrate On Analysis Of Cores From South Coles Levee, Calif., And Rangely, Colo. FieldsMLA: RI 4716 Effect Of Oil-Base Drilling Fluid Filtrate On Analysis Of Cores From South Coles Levee, Calif., And Rangely, Colo. Fields. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.