Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6638709 | Fuel | 2014 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The plunger has many advantages that favor its use over centrifugation such as successful recovery of highly viscous oil from cores, lower oil sediment fines/water content and faster sample extraction (typically 30Â min to 1Â h versus 2Â h). The plunger has also been operated at the rig site to generate oil viscosity logs immediately following core recovery (prior to or during petrophysical logging) affording real time data acquisition to support decisions for conducting production flow tests while drilling rigs are onsite. Incidentally, due to the improved preservation of physical properties controlling volatile liquid components, repeated plunging of larger volumes of sample core can be used to recover large enough volumes of heavy oil or bitumen for PVT or specialist assay analysis. Since the plunger is operated under a sealed system the device may be configured in such a way to interface with a PVT cell. Gas introduced into the plunger system ultimately can lead to the production and collection of “enlivened oils” for viscosity measurements.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
B. Bennett, C. Jiang, L.R. Snowdon, S.R. Larter,