A natural gas liquid with a low vapor pressure, compared with natural gasoline and liquified petroleum gas It is produced from a deep well where the temperature and pressure are high Gas condenses as it rises up the wellbore and reaches the surface as condensate Similarly, condensate separates out naturally in pipelines or in a separation plant by the normal process of condensation
A light hydrocarbon liquid obtained by condensation of hydrocarbon vapors It consists of varying proportions of butane, propane, pentane, and heavier fractions, with little or no ethane or methane Condensate generally has an APl gravity of 50 to 120 degrees and is water-white, straw or bluish in color
Condensate is the liquid formed from a vapor (gas) or a solid formed from a liquid through a chemical phase change For instance, water condensate forms on the can of a cold soda as it sits at room temperature in a humid environment
in refining, the liquid produced when hydrocarbon vapors are cooled In oil and gas production, the term applies to hydrocarbons that exist in gaseous form under reservoir conditions, but condense to a liquid when brought to the surface
Any mixture of relatively light hydrocarbons which remain liquid at normal temperature and pressure Condensate generally appears when gas is drawn from a well and its temperature and pressure change sufficiently for some of it to become liquid petroleum
Condensate is formed when "heavy" hydrocarbons, such as ethane, propane, butane, and pentane condense as pressure suddenly drops at the surface Separators are used to remove condensate from natural gas