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Production Engineering and Research - Role of Connate Water in Secondary Recovery of Oil (T.P. 1608, Petr. Tech., July 1943).By Parke A. Dickey, Robert B. Bossler
The presence of connate water in oil sands is of far greater practical significance in secondary oil-recovery operations than it is in primary operations. The percentage saturations of oil, water, and
Jan 1, 1944
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Drilling and Production Equipment, Methods and Materials - Factors Involved in Removal of Sulphate from Drilling Muds by Barium CarbonateBy W. E. Bergman, P. G. Carpenter, H. B. Fisher
The conditions under which barium carbonate can be used to remove sulfates from drilling muds are limited The amount of sulfate remaining in solution in the system after treatment with barium carbonat
Jan 1, 1949
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Drilling and Production Equipment, Methods and Materials - Factors Involved in Removal of Sulphate from Drilling Muds by Barium CarbonateBy P. G. Carpenter, H. B. Fisher, W. E. Bergman
The conditions under which barium carbonate can be used to remove sulfates from drilling muds are limited The amount of sulfate remaining in solution in the system after treatment with barium carbonat
Jan 1, 1949
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Reservoir Engineering- Laboratory Research - Fluid Dispersion and Distribution in Porous Media Using the Frequency Response Method With a Radioactive TracerBy R. R. Goddard
By use of the frequency response method with a radioactive tracer, it was possible to determine fluid dispersion and distribution in a natural consolidated and an unconsolidated medium. Measurements w
Jan 1, 1967
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Reservoir Engineering - General - A Study of Anomalons Pressure Build-up BehaviorBy C. S. Matthews, G. L. Stegemeier
In one field in South Texas, approximately 72 per cent of the pressure build-up results show a characteris-i.rtic "hump" (i.e., the pressure builds up and then falls off) which makes interpretation by
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Air-gas Lifts - General Discussion on Air-gas Liftair-lift and equipped with tapered tubing of proper design, we would have a gas input consumption of about 2500 cu. ft. per bbl., which at 3 to 4c. per 1000 cu. ft. would be 7 1/2 to l0c, per bbl., an
Jan 1, 1928
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Producing - Equipment, Methods and Materials - Paraffin Deposition and Prevention in Oil WellsBy R. M. Jorda
The mechanism of parafin deposition and prevention has been studied in the laboratory using an apparatus which provides a quantitative means of studying parafin deposition on metal and plastic surface
Jan 1, 1967
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Institute of Metals Division - Dispersion Strengthening in the Copper-Alumina SystemBy N. J. Grant, K. M. Zwilsky
A series of copper-alumina dispersion strengthened alloys were prepared using three different copper and two different alumina powder sizes. Improvements in strength of up to ten times that of pure co
Jan 1, 1962
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Sulfur And PyritesBy R. D. Mollison, C. F. Fogarty
Sulfur is widely distributed in nature. It is present in the earth's crust, the ocean, the meteorites that come to us from cosmic space and in practically all animal and plant life. According to
Jan 1, 1960
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Institute of Metals Division - The Influence of Thermal Treatments upon the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Aluminum-Aluminum Oxide AlloysBy F. V. Lenel, J. A. Dromsky
The influence of thermal and mechanical treatments upon the elevated-temperature stability, the microstructure, and the mechanical properties of aluminumaluminum oxide alloys is investigated. Compacts
Jan 1, 1964
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Preface (7bd3c071-98a1-4372-8510-90e4ac4e6411)Jan 1, 1923
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Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Factors Affecting the Rate of Deposition of Cement in Unfractured Perforations During Squeeze-Cementing OperationsBy G. W. Binkley, R. E. Collins, G. K. Dumbauld
A mathematical analysis has shown that the primary factors affecting the deposition of cement in unfractured perforations during squeeze-cementing operations are: the properties of the cement slurry,
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New Officers Of Southern California SectionAt the annual meeting of Southern California Section, held on May 28, the following officers were elected: Chairman, W. F. Staunton, vice-chairman, L. C. Mott, secretary-treasurer, A. B. Carpenter; ex
Jan 8, 1919
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Preface (94b5bc87-5982-487d-8235-f16bedd5f8a3)Jan 1, 1925
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Preface (076c42e3-fdf0-4afd-b682-bd834c9d89b5)Jan 1, 1921
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Institute of Metals Division - Stress-Strain Characteristics and Slip-Band Formation In Metal Crystals: Effect of Crystal OrientationBy F. D. Rosi
The plastic properties of extended silver and copper crystals of varying purity were studied as a function of crystal orientation in the early stages of flow. Variations in the gross shape of the shea
Jan 1, 1955
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New Publications Of The U. S. Geological SurveyProfessional Paper 112. Upper Cretaceous Floras of the Eastern Gulf Region in Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia, by E. W. Berry. 177 pages, 33 plates, 12 text figures. Professional Paper 1
Jan 12, 1919
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Part IV – April 1968 - Papers - Some Effects of Oxygen on the Tensile Deformation of PolycrystaIIine ZirconiumBy D. H. Baldwin, R. E. Reed-Hill
Six compositions of polycrystalline ZY-0 alloys, containing up to 4.2 at. pct 0, were tested in tension between 77° and 600° K. The data obtained from each of the compositions corresponded closely t
Jan 1, 1969
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Institute of Metals Division - Influence of Crystallographic Order On Creep of Iron-Aluminum Solid SolutionsBy J. A. Coll, R. W. Cahn, A. Lawley
WHILE the creep properties of pure face-centered-cubic and close-packed-hexagonal metals have been thoroughly investigated and are well established, body-centered-cubic metals have been studied less e
Jan 1, 1961