996 resultados para Petroleum production
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Biosurfactants are bioactive agents that can be produced by many different microorganisms. Among those, special attention is given to yeasts, since they can produce many types of biosurfactants in large scale, using several kinds of substrates, justifying its use for industrial production of those products. For this production to be economically viable, the use of residual carbon sources is recommended. The present study isolated yeasts from soil contaminated with petroleum oil hydrocarbons and assessed their capacity for producing biosurfactants in low cost substrates. From a microbial consortium enriched, seven yeasts were isolated, all showing potential for producing biosurfactants in soybean oil. The isolate LBPF 3, characterized as Candida antarctica, obtained the highest levels of production - with a final production of 13.86 g/L. The isolate LBPF 9, using glycerol carbon source, obtained the highest reduction in surface tension in the growth medium: approximately 43% of reduction after 24 hours of incubation. The products obtained by the isolates presented surfactant activity, which reduced water surface tension to values that varied from 34 mN/m, obtained from the product of isolates LBPF 3 and 16 LBPF 7 (respectively characterized as Candida antarctica and Candida albicans) to 43 mN/m from the isolate LPPF 9, using glycerol as substrate. The assessed isolates all showed potential for the production of biosurfactants in conventional sources of carbon as well as in agroindustrial residue, especially in glycerol.
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We describe production of methyl and ethyl esters derived from baru oil (Dipteryx alata Vog.). Water and alcohols are removed from the biodiesel obtained by simple distillation. We study the acidity, density, iodine number, viscosity, water content, peroxide number, external appearance, and saponification number of the oil, its methyl and ethyl esters (biodiesels) and their blends (B5, B10, B15, B20, and B30) with commercial diesel fuel.
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We describe and analyze the efficiency of a new solar-thermochemical reactor concept, which employs a moving packed bed of reactive particles produce of H2 or CO from solar energy and H2O or CO2. The packed bed reactor incorporates several features essential to achieving high efficiency: spatial separation of pressures, temperature, and reaction products in the reactor; solid–solid sensible heat recovery between reaction steps; continuous on-sun operation; and direct solar illumination of the working material. Our efficiency analysis includes material thermodynamics and a detailed accounting of energy losses, and demonstrates that vacuum pumping, made possible by the innovative pressure separation approach in our reactor, has a decisive efficiency advantage over inert gas sweeping. We show that in a fully developed system, using CeO2 as a reactive material, the conversion efficiency of solar energy into H2 and CO at the design point can exceed 30%. The reactor operational flexibility makes it suitable for a wide range of operating conditions, allowing for high efficiency on an annual average basis. The mixture of H2 and CO, known as synthesis gas, is not only usable as a fuel but is also a universal starting point for the production of synthetic fuels compatible with the existing energy infrastructure. This would make it possible to replace petroleum derivatives used in transportation in the U.S., by using less than 0.7% of the U.S. land area, a roughly two orders of magnitude improvement over mature biofuel approaches. In addition, the packed bed reactor design is flexible and can be adapted to new, better performing reactive materials.
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We describe and analyze the efficiency of a new solar-thermochemical reactor concept, which employs a moving packed bed of reactive particles produce of H-2 or CO from solar energy and H2O or CO2. The packed bed reactor incorporates several features essential to achieving high efficiency: spatial separation of pressures, temperature, and reaction products in the reactor; solid-solid sensible heat recovery between reaction steps; continuous on-sun operation; and direct solar illumination of the working material. Our efficiency analysis includes material thermodynamics and a detailed accounting of energy losses, and demonstrates that vacuum pumping, made possible by the innovative pressure separation approach in our reactor, has a decisive efficiency advantage over inert gas sweeping. We show that in a fully developed system, using CeO2 as a reactive material, the conversion efficiency of solar energy into H-2 and CO at the design point can exceed 30%. The reactor operational flexibility makes it suitable for a wide range of operating conditions, allowing for high efficiency on an annual average basis. The mixture of H-2 and CO, known as synthesis gas, is not only usable as a fuel but is also a universal starting point for the production of synthetic fuels compatible with the existing energy infrastructure. This would make it possible to replace petroleum derivatives used in transportation in the U. S., by using less than 0.7% of the U. S. land area, a roughly two orders of magnitude improvement over mature biofuel approaches. In addition, the packed bed reactor design is flexible and can be adapted to new, better performing reactive materials.
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This presentation describes research at Montana Tech to improve oil recovery rates in the Elm Coulee Oil Field in the Bakken Reservoir, Richmond County, Montana. The slides display current recovery rate predictions, enhanced oil recovery methods, reservoir model building and history matching strategies. Recommended development strategies include implementing hydrocarbon gas injection operations to improve current oil recovery rates by more than 75%. The impact of increased production on Production Engineers is also described. The Principal Investigators include John Evans, Leo Heath, David Reichhardt and Burt Todd in the Petroleum Engineering Department.
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Biofuels are an increasingly important component of worldwide energy supply. This research aims to understand the pathways and impacts of biofuels production, and to improve these processes to make them more efficient. In Chapter 2, a life cycle assessment (LCA) is presented for cellulosic ethanol production from five potential feedstocks of regional importance to the upper Midwest - hybrid poplar, hybrid willow, switchgrass, diverse prairie grasses, and logging residues - according to the requirements of Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS). Direct land use change emissions are included for the conversion of abandoned agricultural land to feedstock production, and computer models of the conversion process are used in order to determine the effect of varying biomass composition on overall life cycle impacts. All scenarios analyzed here result in greater than 60% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions relative to petroleum gasoline. Land use change effects were found to contribute significantly to the overall emissions for the first 20 years after plantation establishment. Chapter 3 is an investigation of the effects of biomass mixtures on overall sugar recovery from the combined processes of dilute acid pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis. Biomass mixtures studied were aspen, a hardwood species well suited to biochemical processing; balsam, a high-lignin softwood species, and switchgrass, an herbaceous energy crop with high ash content. A matrix of three different dilute acid pretreatment severities and three different enzyme loading levels was used to characterize interactions between pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis. Maximum glucose yield for any species was 70% oftheoretical for switchgrass, and maximum xylose yield was 99.7% of theoretical for aspen. Supplemental β-glucosidase increased glucose yield from enzymatic hydrolysis by an average of 15%, and total sugar recoveries for mixtures could be predicted to within 4% by linear interpolation of the pure species results. Chapter 4 is an evaluation of the potential for producing Trichoderma reesei cellulose hydrolases in the Kluyveromyces lactis yeast expression system. The exoglucanases Cel6A and Cel7A, and the endoglucanase Cel7B were inserted separately into the K. lactis and the enzymes were analyzed for activity on various substrates. Recombinant Cel7B was found to be active on carboxymethyl cellulose and Avicel powdered cellulose substrates. Recombinant Cel6A was also found to be active on Avicel. Recombinant Cel7A was produced, but no enzymatic activity was detected on any substrate. Chapter 5 presents a new method for enzyme improvement studies using enzyme co-expression and yeast growth rate measurements as a potential high-throughput expression and screening system in K. lactis yeast. Two different K. lactis strains were evaluated for their usefulness in growth screening studies, one wild-type strain and one strain which has had the main galactose metabolic pathway disabled. Sequential transformation and co-expression of the exoglucanase Cel6A and endoglucanase Cel7B was performed, and improved hydrolysis rates on Avicel were detectable in the cell culture supernatant. Future work should focus on hydrolysis of natural substrates, developing the growth screening method, and utilizing the K. lactis expression system for directed evolution of enzymes.
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Sediments from Deep Sea Drilling Project Sites 615, 617, 618, 619, and 620-623 were subjected to pyrolysis. The sediments are immature with respect to petroleum generation as determined by production index values of less than 0.1 and Tmax values of 460-480°C. The amount of pyrolyzable organic matter was moderately low as compared to typical petroleum source rocks. The immature organic matter present does not appear to contain a significant proportion of woody material as shown by the low gas-generating potential. Typical overbank sediments from Sites 617 and 620 generally show higher P2 values (500-800 µg hydrocarbon per g dry weight sediment) than typical channel-fill sediments from Sites 621 and 622 (P2 = 450-560 µg/g). Tmax for both types of sediment remained very constant (462-468 °C) with a slight elevation (+ 15°C) occurring in samples containing lignite. The highest P2 values occurred in sections described as turbidites. Very low P2 values (about 50 µg/g) occurred in sands. P2 values for shallower sections of basin Sites 618 and 619 tended to be higher (900-1000 µg/g) and decreased in deeper, more terrigenous sections of Site 619. Preliminary experiments indicate that microbiological degradation of sediment organic matter causes a decrease in P2. Pyrolyzable organic matter from lower fan Site 623 appears to increase with depth in two different sediment sequences (40-85 and 95-125 m sub-bottom). Organic matter type, as shown by pyrolysis capillary gas chromatography (GC) patterns, was generally the same throughout the well, with much more scatter occurring in the deepest sections (130-155 m sub-bottom). One major and two minor organic matter types could be recognized in both fan and basin sites drilled on Leg 96.
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A method using iodine has been developed for the stabilisation of low softening point (SP) pitch fibres that avoids air stabilisation in the production of carbon fibres (CF). The interaction between iodine and petroleum pitches has been studied by following the changes in the hydrogen content, aromatic or aliphatic, during the heat treatment of iodine-treated pitch fibres. Two low SP petroleum pitches were used and the iodine-treated pitch fibres were analysed by TGA, DSC, DRIFT, XPS and SEM. The results confirm that using this novel method pitches with low SP can be used to prepare CF with two advantages, compared with conventional methods. The stabilisation time is considerably reduced and treatments to increase the SP, usually required when low SP pitches are used to prepare CF, can be avoided.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bound with no. 430-no. 437 subsequent to publication.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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pt. 1. Oil and gas developments. Introduction -- Production and economics -- Drilling and development -- Productive acreage -- Estimated petroleum reserves -- Gas and gas products -- Underground gas storage -- pt. 2. Waterflood operations. Introduction -- Summary -- Project numbers, by county -- Illinois waterfloods operating during 1959 -- Illinois pressure maintenance projects using water injection during 1959 -- Illinois waterflood projects reported abandoned.
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pt. 1. Oil and gas developments. Introduction -- Production and value -- Drilling and development -- Productive acreage -- Estimated petroleum reserves -- Gas and gas products -- Underground gas storage -- County reports -- pt. 2. Waterflood operations. Introduction -- Summary of results -- Project numbers, by county -- Illinois waterflood projects operating during 1957 -- Illinois waterflood projects reported abandoned -- Illinois pressure maintenance projects using water injection during 1957.
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Mode of access: Internet.