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Title: The Sampling And Analysis Of Petroleum Hydrocarbons
Author: R. L. Huntington
Source: 1962 Southwestern Gas Measurement Short Course (Now called ISHM)
Year Published: 1962
Abstract: The accuracy of the determination of the composition of clamps can be closed and the bottle placed in a wooden a liquid or gas consisting of a mixture of hydrocarbon is crate equipped with rubber snubbers to hold the bottle segenerally thought of in terms of the laboratory analyst. rarely in place and to reduce the chances of breakage in The importance of the analytical laboratory is not to be shipmont. minimized however, it is a total loss of time to carry out careful work in the laboratory unless one can be certain that the proper sampling is made of the stream or batch of material under investigation. In other words the analytical results are of no value to the engineer unless they represent the average composition over a definite period of time in the case of continuous process or a portion of a truly homogenous mixture in the analysis of a large batch of stored liquid hydrocarbon. A number of the major companies are making an effort to improve upon sampling practices either by sending out mobile laboratories into outlying districts or by having the technical man go to the Held to obtain the samples. In the absence of the engineer in the field, a set of clear-cut written instructions may serve fairly well as a means of ensuring proper sampling.




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