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Natural Gas -Energy for the Mining IndustryBy Edmund C. Bovey
"AS I begin my remarks this morning, please let me say how honoured and gratified I was to receive your invitation to address you here during your deliberations in historic Quebec City. The high estee
Jan 1, 1966
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Natural Gas And The Competitive Fuel MarketBy Francis J. Quinn
The Natural Gas Act, of 1938, which put interstate pipelines under the jurisdiction of the Federal Power Commission, did not place a protective competitive shield around such companies - nor does any
Jan 1, 1961
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Natural Gas as Fuel at AnacondaBy Louis V. Bender
THIS paper gives a short review of the installation for and the use of gas, as a. fuel, at the Anaconda Reduction Works of the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Before putting in gas tile fuels used were pul
Jan 1, 1932
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Natural Gas Firing at El Paso Smelting WorksBy E. R. MARBLE
THE introduction of a new fuel, such as natural gas, necessitates careful study where it has not been used previously. At the El Paso smelter natural gas required the installation of apparatus with wh
Jan 1, 1930
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Natural Gas for the Northeastern SeaboardBy Lyon F. Terry
IN contemplating the prospects of natural gas being transported from the fields where it is produced to such distant points as Philadelphia, New Jersey, New York City, and New England, let us review t
Jan 1, 1947
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Natural Gas HydratesBy Don B. Carson, Donald L. Katz
NATURAL gases under pressure form crystal-line hydrates with water. Experimental data are reported on four-phase equilibrium for the methane-propane-water, methane-pentane-water, and methane-hexane-wa
Jan 1, 1941
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Natural Gas in Canada and Its UsesBy R. T. Elworthy
Canada ranks second in the list of world consumers of natural gas. In 1923 our production was nearly fifteen million thousand cubic feet valued at $5,800,000. Our output, however, appears very small c
Jan 1, 1925
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Natural Gas Technology - A Computer Simulation of Gas Flow in Long PipelinesBy J. E. Powers, T. D. Taylor, N. E. Wood
A computer program has been developed to simulate a gas transmission 1ine operating under transient conditions. The program was developed by application of the basic mass and momentum balance equation
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Natural Gas Technology - A Correlation of Dewpoint Pressure With Fluid Composition and TemperatureBy L. K. Nemeth, H. T. Kennedy
The investigation presented in this paper was performd to develop a relationship between the dewpoint pressure of a hydrocarbon reservoir fluid and its composition, temperature and characteristics of
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Natural Gas Technology - A Laboratory Investigation of Oil Displacement from Porous Media by a Liquefield Petroleum GasBy J. H. Henderson, H. J. Ledbetter, N. B. Gove, J. D. Griffith
INTRODUCTION The results of a series of laboratory flood tests using liquid Iso-butane to displace refined oils from test cores are pre- ented and interpreted on an empirical bask. The study
Jan 1, 1953
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Natural Gas Technology - A Method for Computing Pressure Behavior and Volume of Gas-Storage ReservoirsBy E. D. Glass, R. C. Hessing
The volume of gas in storage reservoirs may be compuled from estimates of hydrocarbon pore volume and gas density. However, both are dificult 10 estimate accurrately. Further, no adequate method has b
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Natural Gas Technology - A Method of Calculating the Distribution of Temperature in Flowing Gas WellsBy Frank Marotta, Louis B. Lesem, Frank Greytok, John J. McKetta
Although one of the primary variables in the calculation of the flowing bottom-hole pressure in gas wells from surface measurements is the temperature at any point and its distribution in the flow-str
Jan 1, 1958
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Natural Gas Technology - A Method of Predicting the Availability of Natural Gas Based on Average Reservoir PerformanceBy Lee Hillard Meltzer, Ralph E. Davis
INTRODUCTION During the past few years emphasis has been placed upon methods of estimating the future expectancy of gas production from natural gas fields. Before technical methods were applied, th
Jan 1, 1953
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Natural Gas Technology - A Simplified Analysis of Unsteady Radial Gas FlowBy J. S. Aronofsky, R. Jenkins
A simple means of predicting the flowing well pressure history in a natural gas reservoir has been developed. The differential equation for unsteady radial flow of gases through porous media was solve
Jan 1, 1955
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Natural Gas Technology - A Treatment of the Gas Percolation Problem in Simulation of Three-Dimensional, Three-Phase Flow in ReservoirsBy K. H. Coats
This paper describes an approximate technique for handling the problem of percolation of evolved gas upwards through the oil column in computer simulation of natural depletion. This technique has been
Jan 1, 1969
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Natural Gas Technology - An Approximate Method for Non-Darcy Radial Gas FlowBy G. Rowan, M. W. Clegg
Approximate analytical solutions for non-Darcy radial gas flow are derived for bounded and infinite reservoirs producing at either constant rate or constant pressure. These analytical solutions are co
Jan 1, 1965
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Natural Gas Technology - An Attempt to Predict the Time Dependence of Well Deliverability in Gas Condensate FieldsBy J. Husson, R. Iffly, M. Gondouin
A systematic variation of well deliverability, as reflected from isochronal back-pressure tests performed at regular intervals, has been observed in some gas condensate wells producing at high rates.
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Natural Gas Technology - Analysis and Prediction of Minimum Flow Rate for the Continuous Removal of Liquids from Gas WellsBy R. G. Turner, M. G. Hubbard, A. E. Dukler
Gas phase hydrocarbons produced from underground reservoirs will, in many instances, have liquid phase material associated with them, the presence of which can affect the flowing characteristics of th
Jan 1, 1970
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Natural Gas Technology - Application of Real Gas Flow Theory to Well Testing and Deliverability ForecastingBy R. Al-Hussainy, H. J. Ramey
Previous gas well test analyses have been based mainly upon linearizations of ideal gas flow results, although a method for drawdown analysis based upon real gas flow results has been proposed. Linear
Jan 1, 1967
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Natural Gas Technology - Application of the Alternating Direction Explicit Procedure to Two-Dimensional Natural Gas ReservoirsBy P. K. Leung, S. R. Allada, P. M. Dranchuk, D. Quon
The alternating direction explicit procedure (ADEP) makes use of the boundary conditions to reduce multi-dimensional problems to a series of one-dimensional problems. The method, previously applied to
Jan 1, 1967