US3460620A - Recovering oil from nuclear chimneys in oil-yielding solids - Google Patents

Recovering oil from nuclear chimneys in oil-yielding solids Download PDF

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US3460620A
US3460620A US645445A US3460620DA US3460620A US 3460620 A US3460620 A US 3460620A US 645445 A US645445 A US 645445A US 3460620D A US3460620D A US 3460620DA US 3460620 A US3460620 A US 3460620A
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shale
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chimney
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Harry W Parker
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Phillips Petroleum Co
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH DRILLING, e.g. DEEP DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B43/00Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
    • E21B43/16Enhanced recovery methods for obtaining hydrocarbons
    • E21B43/24Enhanced recovery methods for obtaining hydrocarbons using heat, e.g. steam injection
    • E21B43/2403Enhanced recovery methods for obtaining hydrocarbons using heat, e.g. steam injection by means of nuclear energy

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  • This invention relates to a process for the in situ production of hydrocarbons from oil-yielding solids.
  • the invention relates to compacting the rubble contained in a fractured mass produced by an underground nuclear detonation.
  • a 250 kiloton explosive device set olf in a thick shale formation is estimated to create a collapsed chimney 400* feet in diameter and 1,000 feet high.
  • the permeability of the chimney shale makes it feasible to produce oil therefrom in situ with hot gases at a temperature of 500 to l,000 F. or by in situ combustion of a portion of the shale oil or kerogen in the shale and driving out another portion with the resulting heat and hot gases.
  • the invention provides Ifor additional hydrocarbon recovery in such an in situ retorting process by subjecting the spent or retorted shale to heat so that it is compacted. Compaction results in the loss of support for the roof of the chimney and consequent sloughing off of the raw shale onto the mass of spent shale rubble. The heat necessary for compaction of spent shale and for the destructive distillation of raw shale is obtained by burning the carbonaceous residue of the spent shale.
  • the invention utilizes the sloughing characteristics of unsupported rock to feed raw shale to the retorting chamber or spent shale mass rather than relying upon the more expensive hydraulics or explosives known in the prior art.
  • the invention is applicable to oil-yielding solids including tar sands, oil sands, lignite, coal and other like kerogen-containing materials.
  • Another object ofthe invention is to reduce the costs of recovering oil from an oil-yielding solid in situ.
  • a method or recovering hydrocarbons from an oil-yielding solid utilizing a nuclear chimney containing a mass of the solids as rubble which has been previously retorted, the chimney having a rst bore hole communicating with its lower portion and a second bore hole communicating with its uppermost portion, comprising injecting an oxygen-containing gas, such as air, through the first bore hole into the lower portion of the chimney to burn the coke and residual hydrocarbons contained therein, the oxygen-containing gas being injected in an amount suicient to raise the temperature in the lower portion to a level at which the compressive strength ofthe particular retorted solid is substantially reduced to a value at which the weight of the overlying rubble mass causes compaction of the portion and consequent sloughing of raw shale which is in place above the chimney onto the mass of spent rubble.
  • an oxygen-containing gas such as air
  • Hot gases, resulting from the combustion and decomposition of constituents in the solids pass upwardly through the previously retorted or spent solids and then through the newly created (sloughed) raw rubble to educe and distill hydrocarbons therefrom.
  • the hydrocarbons, in vapor and/ or liquid state, and the hot gases are recovered through the second bore hole and separated in conventional surface equipment.
  • the oxygencontaining gas is injected into that portion immediately above the burned compacted zone so as to burn and reduce the compressive strength ofthe spent rubble located therein, causing compaction of this portion and caving more ra-w shale from the roof of the chimney which is then retorted.
  • the air injection progresses upwardly in the mass of rubble until there is no longer enough mass above the burn zone to provide the force for compaction of the burned rubble or to a point where the roof of the chimney has been caved to the upper limits of the oil-yielding stratum.
  • air or other oxygen-containing gas is injected in a quantity suicient to melt the solids or a portion thereof so that the mass has practically no compressive strength.
  • temperatures of about 2,200 F. are sufficient for usion of the shale into a molten slag.
  • the oxygen-containing gas can be injected above the lowermost portion of the rubble mass so that the molten material can flow downwardly and lill the void spaces of the lowermost portion of the rubble mass.
  • Burning at these high temperatures results in a loss of weight, consequently mass, in addition to lowering the compressive strength.
  • the rubble rnass has void spaces and as the compressive strength is reduced the weight of the overlying mass crushes the burned solids so that they flow into or take up this void space thus the settling is not a result of the loss of compressive strength of the material alone, but is an effect of the combination of decomposition and loss of material to gas iiow, the filling of void spaces present in the rubble mass, and the reduction in compressive strength.
  • the temperature necessary to decompose constituents in the solid material and to reduce compressive strength is of course a function of the composition of the particular solid. These factors can be easily determined by simple laboratory tests, defining the temperature parameters necessary to obtain compaction of an underground rubble mass of the material.
  • One method is to heat cores of the material to various temperatures for various time periods and use a hydraulic compression tester to determine compressive strength.
  • a previously-retorted nuclear chimney in an oil shale stratum 12 is provided with a central bore hole 14 which communicates with the void space 16 formed by a settling of the shale rubble 18 after detonation of a nuclear device.
  • Previous retorting of the chimney can be accomplished by recovery methods known in the art such as in situ combustion, steam injection or hot gas injection.
  • the nuclear device will generally be detonated in the lower portion of the shale stratum 12 in order to have sufiicient cover to prevent surface contamination and venting of radioactive products of the blast.
  • the table below illustrates the characteristics of a typical nuclear chimney.
  • a bore hole 24 communicating with the lower portion of the rubble mass 18.
  • a plurality of bore holes such as 214, can be provided in a ring pattern around the chimney for air injection.
  • a product recovery conduit 26 is connected between the well head of bore hole 14 and a heat exchanger 28.
  • An air injection conduit 30 is connected between the heat exchanger 28 and the well head of bore hole 24.
  • the overburden stratum 32 contains substantially no oilyielding solids. For the sake of clarity in the drawing, auxiliary surface equipment such as condensers, separators and compressors have been omitted.
  • an oxygen-containing gas such as air
  • heat exchanger 28 is passed via conduit 30 and injected through bore hole 24 into the lower portion of the mass of spent shale nibble in chimney 18.
  • the spent shale contains coke and a substantial amount of hydrocarbons, since most retorting methods recover only about 70 percent of the Fisher Assay of the oil-yielding solids.
  • the spent shale is at a relatively high temperature for example 400-700 F. because of the previous retorting operation.
  • combustion of the coke and remaining hydrocarbon results.
  • the oxygen-containing gas is injected in an amount sufiicient to raise the temperature of the shale rubble to above 1550 F. At this temperature and above there is a significant alteration in the structure of the solids,
  • FIGURE 1 the spent nuclear chimney is illustrated in the initial stage of air injection and burning.
  • the roof 34 and upper portion of the side walls of the chimney are left unsupported and will Slough onto the top of rubble 18 filling void space 16.
  • the hot combustion and decomposition gases which result from the high temperature burning in the lower portion rise upwardly through the rubble mass and rapidly heat the mass of raw shale sloughed from the roof to educe hydrocarbons therefrom.
  • the educed hydrocarbons will be mostly in vapor form because of the high temperature eduction and distillation.
  • the process is especially advantageous because of this rapid high temperature retorting yields large quantities of olefinic and aromatic hydrocarbons which are more valuable than normal shale oil.
  • the hydrocarbons and heating gases are recovered through bore hole 14 at relatively high temperatures, for example 500-900" F., and pass via conduit 26 through heat exchanger 28 to heat the injection air. From heat exchanger 28 the product vapors are passed to various separation and processing steps.
  • the burned portion in the lower levels of the chimney has been maintained at the desired temperature level (from about 1550 to over 2200 F.) for a time sufficient to compact the solids air is injected into the rubble above the burned compacted portion by directionally drilling another well or by perforating and fracturing a zone at the desired level so that communication is established with the fractures 22 allowing air to be injected therethrough.
  • Bore hole 14 extends into chimney 10 penetrating rubble 18 to just above melt zone 36, which forms from the burned molten shale.
  • Bore hole 14 is provided with a casing 38 and a tubing string 40.
  • the casing 3S has a perforated section 42 at the level of void space 16 and has packers 44 and 46 to seal the annular space between the casing and the tubing.
  • preheated air is injected through tubing string 40 into rubble mass 18 thus burning the mass to produce the molten or semimolten zone 36 and cause settling of the rubble.
  • the top of the original spent rubble mass in chimney is shown by line 48.
  • the raw shale rubble created by sloughing of roof 34 shown above line 48 is retorted fby the hot gases rising through the mass.
  • the use of high temperature gases in retorting the shale has the additional advantage of heating roof 34.
  • the raw shale has a temperature of approximately 140 F. in place and when subjected to hot vapors at from 500- 900 F., the raw shale expands thus assisting in sloughing material from roof 34.
  • the produced hydrocarbons and gases are recovered through perforated section 42 of casing 3S, ilo-wing up the annulus and via conduit 26 to heat exchanger 28.
  • Packer 46 prevents the back'tlow of produced gases into the burn zone.
  • the high temperature burn zone is progressed upwardly through rubble 18 by raising of packer 44 and perforating casing 38 at the level desired for air injection. As roof 34 sloughs in lling void space 16 packer 46 is raised and new perforations are made to allow for ingress of gases from the newly formed void space.
  • the temperature range of 1550 to 2200 F. is applicable to oil shales.
  • Other oilyielding solids, to which the invention is applicable will show the necessary loss in compressive strengths at different temperatures depending upon their particular composition. These temperatures can be determined by simple laboratory testing of the solids at various temperatures.
  • the compressive strength of said heated rubble being substantially reduced to tht point at which the weight of the rubble mass above said heated lower portion causes compaction of said lower portion of rubble and consequent sloughing oi raw oil-yielding solids which are in place above said chimney onto said mass of rubble originally remaining in said chimney subsequent to said previous retortlng; passing combustion and decomposition gases resulting from said burning of said previously retorted rubble upwardly through said sloughed solids to heat and reduce hydrocarbons from said sloughed solids; and
  • said nuclear chimney has an axial bore hole extending into the lower portion thereof, said bore hole having a casing ⁇ and tubing string contained within the casing, said casing being perforated above the rubble mass in said chimney and having a packer below said perforations sealing the annular space between said casing and said tubing;

Description

3,460,620 RECOVERING OlL FROM NUCLEAR lCHIMNEYS IN OIL-YIELDIN G SOLIDS Harry W. Parker, Bartlesville, Okla., assignor to Phillips Petroleum Company, a corporation of Delaware Filed .lune 12, 1967, Ser. No. 645,445 Int. Cl. E21b 43/24 U.S. Cl. 166-257 7 Claims ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE Air or other oxygen containing gas is injected into the lower portion of a previously retorted nuclear chimney to burn coke and raise the temperature therein to a level at 'which the compressive strength of the shale rubble is substantially reduced. Reduction of the compressive strength of the shale results in compaction of the spent shale and consequent loss of support of the roof of the chimney, causing sloughing of raw' shale onto the retorted mass where it is then retorted by hot combustion gases rising through the rubble.
This invention relates to a process for the in situ production of hydrocarbons from oil-yielding solids. In one aspect, the invention relates to compacting the rubble contained in a fractured mass produced by an underground nuclear detonation.
The in situ retorting of shattered or broken oil-yielding solids, such as oil shale, in nuclear chimneys resulting from the detonation of a nuclear device in the oil shale is discussed by- M. A. Lekas and N. C. Carpenter in an article entitled Fracturing `Oil Shale With Nuclear Explosives for In Situ Retorting presented in the Quarterly of the Colorado School of Mines, volume 60, No. 3, July 1965, pp. 7-30. The nuclear chimney in an oil shale is a highly permeable mass of broken and displaced shale ranging in size from blocks 2 to 3 feet across to sand sized grains. A 250 kiloton explosive device set olf in a thick shale formation is estimated to create a collapsed chimney 400* feet in diameter and 1,000 feet high. The permeability of the chimney shale makes it feasible to produce oil therefrom in situ with hot gases at a temperature of 500 to l,000 F. or by in situ combustion of a portion of the shale oil or kerogen in the shale and driving out another portion with the resulting heat and hot gases.
The invention provides Ifor additional hydrocarbon recovery in such an in situ retorting process by subjecting the spent or retorted shale to heat so that it is compacted. Compaction results in the loss of support for the roof of the chimney and consequent sloughing off of the raw shale onto the mass of spent shale rubble. The heat necessary for compaction of spent shale and for the destructive distillation of raw shale is obtained by burning the carbonaceous residue of the spent shale. The invention utilizes the sloughing characteristics of unsupported rock to feed raw shale to the retorting chamber or spent shale mass rather than relying upon the more expensive hydraulics or explosives known in the prior art. In addition to oil shale, the invention is applicable to oil-yielding solids including tar sands, oil sands, lignite, coal and other like kerogen-containing materials.
Accordingly it is an object of the invention to provide an improved method for in situ retorting and producing hydrocarbons from oil-yielding solids.
"United States Patent O ice Another object of the invention is to increase the yield of an in situ nuclear chimney retorting method.
Another object ofthe invention is to reduce the costs of recovering oil from an oil-yielding solid in situ.
These and other objects will be apparent to one skilled in the art upon the consideration of the specilication, drawings and appended claims.
According to the invention, there is provided a method or recovering hydrocarbons from an oil-yielding solid, utilizing a nuclear chimney containing a mass of the solids as rubble which has been previously retorted, the chimney having a rst bore hole communicating with its lower portion and a second bore hole communicating with its uppermost portion, comprising injecting an oxygen-containing gas, such as air, through the first bore hole into the lower portion of the chimney to burn the coke and residual hydrocarbons contained therein, the oxygen-containing gas being injected in an amount suicient to raise the temperature in the lower portion to a level at which the compressive strength ofthe particular retorted solid is substantially reduced to a value at which the weight of the overlying rubble mass causes compaction of the portion and consequent sloughing of raw shale which is in place above the chimney onto the mass of spent rubble. Hot gases, resulting from the combustion and decomposition of constituents in the solids pass upwardly through the previously retorted or spent solids and then through the newly created (sloughed) raw rubble to educe and distill hydrocarbons therefrom. The hydrocarbons, in vapor and/ or liquid state, and the hot gases are recovered through the second bore hole and separated in conventional surface equipment.
Further, in accordance Iwith the invention, as the burned solids compact and the rubble mass settles, the oxygencontaining gas is injected into that portion immediately above the burned compacted zone so as to burn and reduce the compressive strength ofthe spent rubble located therein, causing compaction of this portion and caving more ra-w shale from the roof of the chimney which is then retorted. The air injection progresses upwardly in the mass of rubble until there is no longer enough mass above the burn zone to provide the force for compaction of the burned rubble or to a point where the roof of the chimney has been caved to the upper limits of the oil-yielding stratum.
ln one embodiment, air or other oxygen-containing gas is injected in a quantity suicient to melt the solids or a portion thereof so that the mass has practically no compressive strength. When this embodiment is employed in oil shale, temperatures of about 2,200 F. are sufficient for usion of the shale into a molten slag. When utilizing temperatures of this magnitude, the oxygen-containing gas can be injected above the lowermost portion of the rubble mass so that the molten material can flow downwardly and lill the void spaces of the lowermost portion of the rubble mass.
Burning at these high temperatures results in a loss of weight, consequently mass, in addition to lowering the compressive strength. The rubble rnass has void spaces and as the compressive strength is reduced the weight of the overlying mass crushes the burned solids so that they flow into or take up this void space thus the settling is not a result of the loss of compressive strength of the material alone, but is an effect of the combination of decomposition and loss of material to gas iiow, the filling of void spaces present in the rubble mass, and the reduction in compressive strength.
The temperature necessary to decompose constituents in the solid material and to reduce compressive strength is of course a function of the composition of the particular solid. These factors can be easily determined by simple laboratory tests, defining the temperature parameters necessary to obtain compaction of an underground rubble mass of the material. One method is to heat cores of the material to various temperatures for various time periods and use a hydraulic compression tester to determine compressive strength.
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals will be used to denote like elements in the different figures, the invention will be described in detail.
In FIGURE 1, a previously-retorted nuclear chimney in an oil shale stratum 12 is provided with a central bore hole 14 which communicates with the void space 16 formed by a settling of the shale rubble 18 after detonation of a nuclear device. Previous retorting of the chimney can be accomplished by recovery methods known in the art such as in situ combustion, steam injection or hot gas injection. The nuclear device will generally be detonated in the lower portion of the shale stratum 12 in order to have sufiicient cover to prevent surface contamination and venting of radioactive products of the blast. The table below illustrates the characteristics of a typical nuclear chimney.
Chimney characteristics for a 50-kiloton nuclear explosion at 3,000 feet Radius ft 133 Height ..-ft 655 Bulk porsity (fractional) .267 Void volume cu. ft 9.85 106 Total volume cu. ft 36.90X 106 Oil shale rubble volume cu. ft 27.05 106 Oil shale rubble mass tons 1.86 106 Volume shale oil (Kerogen) contained in rubble (assumed 25 gal/ton) bbls-- 1.10 10S The nuclear blast forming the mass of rubble 18 also creates a solidified melt zone 20 in the bottom of the chimney and fissures or fractures 22 which extend radially outwardly from the chimney.
There is also provided a bore hole 24 communicating with the lower portion of the rubble mass 18. If desired a plurality of bore holes, such as 214, can be provided in a ring pattern around the chimney for air injection. A product recovery conduit 26 is connected between the well head of bore hole 14 and a heat exchanger 28. An air injection conduit 30 is connected between the heat exchanger 28 and the well head of bore hole 24. The overburden stratum 32 contains substantially no oilyielding solids. For the sake of clarity in the drawing, auxiliary surface equipment such as condensers, separators and compressors have been omitted.
In the embodiment of the invention illustrated in FIGURE 1, an oxygen-containing gas, such as air, preheated by heat exchange with produced gases in heat exchanger 28 is passed via conduit 30 and injected through bore hole 24 into the lower portion of the mass of spent shale nibble in chimney 18. The spent shale contains coke and a substantial amount of hydrocarbons, since most retorting methods recover only about 70 percent of the Fisher Assay of the oil-yielding solids. The spent shale is at a relatively high temperature for example 400-700 F. because of the previous retorting operation. Upon injection of hot oxygen-containing gas, combustion of the coke and remaining hydrocarbon results. The oxygen-containing gas is injected in an amount sufiicient to raise the temperature of the shale rubble to above 1550 F. At this temperature and above there is a significant alteration in the structure of the solids,
loss of mass, and loss of compressive strength. For example, when 30 gallon per ton oil shale having a compressive strength of about 12,000 p.s.i. is heated to about 1550 F., its compressive strength is reduced to less than p.s.i. The mass of spent rubble above the burned portion exerts about 1 p.s.i. per foot of depth, therefore when rubble is heated to about 1550 F. at any depth more than 125 feet below the top of the rubble mass, compaction occurs. In addition, as the larger fragments of spent rubble are crushed and compressed, they provide material which is sized to fill a portion of the void spaces in the rubble mass. As shown in the table, these void spaces account for approximately 1A: of the original chimney volume.
By injecting air and raising the temperature of the shale rubble to about 2200 F., there will be formed a molten slag of material which completely utilizes the void spaces for volume reduction and may dissipate to a small extent into the fractures 22 formed by the original nuclear detonation.
In FIGURE 1 the spent nuclear chimney is illustrated in the initial stage of air injection and burning. As the temperature increases, causing compaction and settling of the mass of rubble, the roof 34 and upper portion of the side walls of the chimney are left unsupported and will Slough onto the top of rubble 18 filling void space 16. The hot combustion and decomposition gases which result from the high temperature burning in the lower portion rise upwardly through the rubble mass and rapidly heat the mass of raw shale sloughed from the roof to educe hydrocarbons therefrom. The educed hydrocarbons will be mostly in vapor form because of the high temperature eduction and distillation. The process is especially advantageous because of this rapid high temperature retorting yields large quantities of olefinic and aromatic hydrocarbons which are more valuable than normal shale oil. The hydrocarbons and heating gases are recovered through bore hole 14 at relatively high temperatures, for example 500-900" F., and pass via conduit 26 through heat exchanger 28 to heat the injection air. From heat exchanger 28 the product vapors are passed to various separation and processing steps.
When the burned portion in the lower levels of the chimney has been maintained at the desired temperature level (from about 1550 to over 2200 F.) for a time sufficient to compact the solids air is injected into the rubble above the burned compacted portion by directionally drilling another well or by perforating and fracturing a zone at the desired level so that communication is established with the fractures 22 allowing air to be injected therethrough.
The air injection and burning are established progressively vertically through the spent shale mass, creating more compaction and extending the roof of the chimney upwardly (as shown by the broken lines) through the stratum until all the shale which was in place over the original spent chimney has been retorted. Upon completion of the process and recovery 0f all available hydrocarbons, there exists a large body of hot or molten shale, into which fluids such as water can be injected to recover the heat.
Referring to FIGURE 2, another embodiment is illustrated and the process of the invention is shown in a more advanced stage. Bore hole 14 extends into chimney 10 penetrating rubble 18 to just above melt zone 36, which forms from the burned molten shale. Bore hole 14 is provided with a casing 38 and a tubing string 40. The casing 3S has a perforated section 42 at the level of void space 16 and has packers 44 and 46 to seal the annular space between the casing and the tubing.
In accordance with this embodiment of the invention, preheated air is injected through tubing string 40 into rubble mass 18 thus burning the mass to produce the molten or semimolten zone 36 and cause settling of the rubble. The top of the original spent rubble mass in chimney is shown by line 48. The raw shale rubble created by sloughing of roof 34 shown above line 48 is retorted fby the hot gases rising through the mass. The use of high temperature gases in retorting the shale has the additional advantage of heating roof 34. The raw shale has a temperature of approximately 140 F. in place and when subjected to hot vapors at from 500- 900 F., the raw shale expands thus assisting in sloughing material from roof 34.
The produced hydrocarbons and gases are recovered through perforated section 42 of casing 3S, ilo-wing up the annulus and via conduit 26 to heat exchanger 28. Packer 46 prevents the back'tlow of produced gases into the burn zone.
The high temperature burn zone is progressed upwardly through rubble 18 by raising of packer 44 and perforating casing 38 at the level desired for air injection. As roof 34 sloughs in lling void space 16 packer 46 is raised and new perforations are made to allow for ingress of gases from the newly formed void space.
The temperature range of 1550 to 2200 F., as set forth in this specification, is applicable to oil shales. Other oilyielding solids, to which the invention is applicable, will show the necessary loss in compressive strengths at different temperatures depending upon their particular composition. These temperatures can be determined by simple laboratory testing of the solids at various temperatures.
Reasonable modication and variation are within the scope of the invention which sets forth a novel in situ method of recovering hydrocarbons from oil-yielding solids.
That which is claimed is:
1. A process for recovering additional hydrocarbons from rubble contained in, and oil-yielding shale surrounding, a previously retorted nuclear chimney formed in a mass of oil-yielding shale, said rubble having been previously retorted under conditions to leave a spent shale having a coke and `carbonaceous residue therein, which process comprises, in combination, the steps of:
injecting a free oxygen-containing gas into the lower portion of said previously retorted chimney to initiate and maintain a combustion zone burning coke and residual hydrocarbons in the carbonaceous residue contained in said previously retorted rubble therein, said oxygen-containing gas injection being in an amount and for a period of time suicient to increase the temperature in said lower portion of the chimney to at least about 1550 P. at which there is a significant alteration in the structure of, loss of mass from, and loss of compressive strength of said rubble in said chimney, the compressive strength of said heated rubble being substantially reduced to tht point at which the weight of the rubble mass above said heated lower portion causes compaction of said lower portion of rubble and consequent sloughing oi raw oil-yielding solids which are in place above said chimney onto said mass of rubble originally remaining in said chimney subsequent to said previous retortlng; passing combustion and decomposition gases resulting from said burning of said previously retorted rubble upwardly through said sloughed solids to heat and reduce hydrocarbons from said sloughed solids; and
recovering said hydrocarbons and gases from the uppermost portion of said chimney.
2. The process of claim li wherein said nuclear chimney has a rst bore hole communicating with its lower portion and a second bore hole communicating with its uppermost portion, said oxygen-containing gas being injected through said rst bore hole and said hydrocarbons and gas being recovered through said second bore hole.
3. The process of claim 1 wherein:
said nuclear chimney has an axial bore hole extending into the lower portion thereof, said bore hole having a casing `and tubing string contained within the casing, said casing being perforated above the rubble mass in said chimney and having a packer below said perforations sealing the annular space between said casing and said tubing;
said oxygen-containing gas being injected through said tubing string; and
said hydrocarbons and gases being recovered through said perforations and the annulus of said casing.
4. The process of claim 1 wherein said combustion zone is progressed upwardly in said nuclear chimney after compacting said lower portion by injecting oxygencontaining gas at successively higher levels in said rubble mass.
5. The process of claim 1 wherein said temperature is within the range of 1550 to 2200 F.
6. The process of claim 1 wherein said temperature i: above 1550 F.
7. The process of claim 1 wherein said recovered hydrocarbons and gases are passed in heat exchange witlr. said oxygen-containing gas prior to injection.
No references cited.
lRE-UBE'N EPSTEIN, Primary Examiner U.S. C1. X.R.
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US3565171A (en) * 1968-10-23 1971-02-23 Shell Oil Co Method for producing shale oil from a subterranean oil shale formation
US3593789A (en) * 1968-10-18 1971-07-20 Shell Oil Co Method for producing shale oil from an oil shale formation
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US4005752A (en) * 1974-07-26 1977-02-01 Occidental Petroleum Corporation Method of igniting in situ oil shale retort with fuel rich flue gas
US4093026A (en) * 1977-01-17 1978-06-06 Occidental Oil Shale, Inc. Removal of sulfur dioxide from process gas using treated oil shale and water
US4105072A (en) * 1976-11-29 1978-08-08 Occidental Oil Shale Process for recovering carbonaceous values from post in situ oil shale retorting
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US4148359A (en) * 1978-01-30 1979-04-10 Shell Oil Company Pressure-balanced oil recovery process for water productive oil shale
US4192552A (en) * 1978-04-03 1980-03-11 Cha Chang Y Method for establishing a combustion zone in an in situ oil shale retort having a pocket at the top
US4224990A (en) * 1979-01-19 1980-09-30 Occidental Oil Shale, Inc. Method for flattening the combustion zone in an in situ oil shale retort by the addition of fuel
US4243100A (en) * 1979-05-04 1981-01-06 Occidental Oil Shale, Inc. Operation of in situ oil shale retort with void at the top
US4263970A (en) * 1977-01-27 1981-04-28 Occidental Oil Shale, Inc. Method for assuring uniform combustion in an in situ oil shale retort

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Cited By (14)

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