retrograde Gas:
in Phase Diagram somewhere between the Critical point and pmax and Tmax
Has a paradox behaviour -> kondensate occures when reducing pressure or increasing pressure!
The gas condensate is acidic. The acidity in the gas corrodes, therefore, forming sulphurised condensate droplets. Heating desulphurised the gas condensate.
Veq = 133000*(Condensate specific gr/Mol wt of condensate) in SCF/STB Where, Mol wt of condensate = 6084/(API-5.9)
yes
CGR, or Condensate Gas ratio, is the ratio of condensate liquid volume divided by dry gas volume. The field unit is bbl/MMscf. The inverse of CGR is GOR (Gas Oil ratio), although solution GOR is the amount of gas dissolved in 1 bbl of oil, while CGR is an indicator of how much condensate will drop out of 1 MMscf of gas.
condensate
Condensate production divided by (hydrocarbon) gas production. Conventional units stb/MMscf.
A bose-einstein condensate.
Shortly, a Bose-Einstein condensate is a dilute gas of bosons at a temperature near 0 Kelvin.
Not liquid but a gas; lithium condensate is a strange state of matter - a very diluted gas at a temperature near zero absolute. The properties of this phase are explained by the Bose-Einstein theory.
That is the correct spelling of "condensation" (a gas going to a liquid state).
Not liquid but a gas; lithium condensate is a strange state of matter - a very diluted gas at a temperature near zero absolute. The properties of this phase are explained by the Bose-Einstein theory.
In fact there are 6 states of matter: Solid, Liquid, Gas, Plasma, Bose - Einstein Condensate and Fermionic Condensate