RI 6603 Oil Recovery From 17 Water-Injection Projects In Clay, Jack, Montague, And Wise Counties, Tex.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Jr. Frank Parrish
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
110
File Size:
5751 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1965

Abstract

This report describes the performance of 17 selected water-injection projects producing from Pennsylvanian-and Permian-age reservoirs. Illustrations depict reservoir structure and thickness, and production and injection history. A selected bibliography of publications pertaining to area oil recovery and geology is included. Tabulations of field and reservoir data reveal marked differences in the projects. Increased oil recovery resulted from injecting water in most cases; however, seven projects recovered less oil than the operators anticipated. Oil recovery by water injection ranged from 0.2 to 262 bbl per acre ft, or 0.1 to 22.5 pct of the initial stock-tank oil in place. Major reasons suggested for poor performance include: (1) Adverse directional horizontal permeability, (2) channeling of injected water through fractures or zones of high permeability, and (3) lack of containment of injected water. One 330-foot-deep project is among the first successful shallow water-floods in north Texas. Another project is the first successful Canyon sand-stone waterflood reported in the area. Previous gas injection in two Cisco sandstone projects did not prevent the reservoirs from responding favorably to waterflooding.
Citation

APA: Jr. Frank Parrish  (1965)  RI 6603 Oil Recovery From 17 Water-Injection Projects In Clay, Jack, Montague, And Wise Counties, Tex.

MLA: Jr. Frank Parrish RI 6603 Oil Recovery From 17 Water-Injection Projects In Clay, Jack, Montague, And Wise Counties, Tex.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1965.

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