Oil Compressibility - Bulk Modulus of Oil (API 30-40) 0-3000 psi & 10-20°C

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on obtaining the bulk modulus of oil with API Gravity 30-40, specifically within the pressure range of 0-3000 psi and temperature range of 10-20 degrees Celsius. Participants emphasize the variability of hydrocarbons and the need for specific details such as gas-oil ratio and specific gravity to provide accurate data. A recommendation is made to use the NIST REFPROP program, which can generate the desired charts if the correct fluid type is specified. Hand calculations were also suggested as a preliminary approach, though using NIST is preferred for accuracy. The conversation highlights the importance of precise conditions for calculating oil compressibility.
Filippo54US
Messages
9
Reaction score
0
Could anybody provide information on the bulk modulus of oil (say API Gravity 30-40) in the range of pressure 0-3000 psi and in the range of temperature 10-20 degrees C?

Many thanks

Filippo Librino
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Filippo54US said:
Could anybody provide information on the bulk modulus of oil (say API Gravity 30-40) in the range of pressure 0-3000 psi and in the range of temperature 10-20 degrees C?

Many thanks

Filippo Librino

Can you provide more details about the oil (e.g. gas-oil ratio, specific gravity, separator temp and pressure)? Hydrocarbons typically vary quite a bit over that large of a range.

CS
 
stewartcs said:
Can you provide more details about the oil (e.g. gas-oil ratio, specific gravity, separator temp and pressure)? Hydrocarbons typically vary quite a bit over that large of a range.

CS

Thanks for your reply. Please assume no gas. As far as pressure and temperature, I am actually looking for curves or tables showing how the oil bulk module varies in the range 0-3000 psi and 10-20 degrees C.

Filippo Librino
 
Filippo54US said:
Thanks for your reply. Please assume no gas. As far as pressure and temperature, I am actually looking for curves or tables showing how the oil bulk module varies in the range 0-3000 psi and 10-20 degrees C.

Filippo Librino

NIST has a program called REFPROP that can probably generate the chart you want if you can specify the type of fluid. Version 8.0 includes most hydrocarbons so make sure you use it. Otherwise, you'll have to specify the exact conditions (specific gravity, pressure, temp, etc.) and calculate it.

CS
 
stewartcs said:
NIST has a program called REFPROP that can probably generate the chart you want if you can specify the type of fluid. Version 8.0 includes most hydrocarbons so make sure you use it. Otherwise, you'll have to specify the exact conditions (specific gravity, pressure, temp, etc.) and calculate it.

CS

Thanks. I will try to get access to REFPROP 8.0.

Filippo Librino
 
Filippo54US said:
Thanks. I will try to get access to REFPROP 8.0.

Filippo Librino

I ran some hand calcs to give you an idea of what it would be with some arbitrary properties.

Note that validity of the compressibility regarding the bubble point pressure (there are some other limitations that I haven't listed but are not directly applicable given the information you have already provided). Also, the formulas I used are for petroleum fluids (e.g. crude oil) and are based in part on empirical data.

I would still recommend using NIST instead.

Hope this helps.

CS
 

Attachments

  • oil_comp.JPG
    oil_comp.JPG
    67.5 KB · Views: 1,097
stewartcs said:
I ran some hand calcs to give you an idea of what it would be with some arbitrary properties.

Note that validity of the compressibility regarding the bubble point pressure (there are some other limitations that I haven't listed but are not directly applicable given the information you have already provided). Also, the formulas I used are for petroleum fluids (e.g. crude oil) and are based in part on empirical data.

I would still recommend using NIST instead.

Hope this helps.

CS

Thanks for the additional information!

Filippo Librino
 
Back
Top