Oil & Gas Glossary 1.0
OIL & GAS TECHNICAL TERMS GLOSSARY
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Search Result for Circulate And Weight Method
circulate-and-weight method
See concurrent method
molecular weight
The sum of the atomic weights in a molecule. For example, the molecular weight of water is 18, because the atomic weight of each of the hydrogen molecules is 1 and the atomic weight of oxygen is 16. See mole
constant choke-pressure method
A method of killing a well that has kicked, in which the choke size is adjusted to maintain a constant casing pressure. This method does not work unless the kick is all or nearly all salt water. if the kick is gas, this method will not maintain a constant bottomhole pressure, because gas expands as it rises in the annulus. In any case, it is not a recommended well-control procedure.
equivalent weight or combining weight
The atomic or formula weight of an element, compound, or ion divided by its valence. Elements entering into combination always do so in quantities proportional to their equivalent weights.
weight up
To increase the weight or density of drilling fluid by adding weighting material.
buoyancy
The apparent loss of weight of an object immersed in a fluid. If the object is floating, the immersed portion displaces a volume of fluid the weight of which is equal to the weight of the object.
mud balance
A beam balance consisting of a cup and a graduated arm carrying a sliding weight and resting on a fulcrum. It is used to determine the density or weight of drilling mud.
weight indicator
An instrument near the driller's position on a drilling rig that shows both the weight of the drill stem that is hanging from the hook (hook load)
mud weight recorder
An instrument installed in the mud pits that has a recorder mounted on the rig floor to provide a continuous reading of the mud weight.
sinker bar
A heavy weight or bar placed on or near a lightweight wireline tool. The bar provides weight so that the tool will lower properly into the well.
drill pipe
Heavy seamless tubing used to rotate the bit and circulate the drilling fluid. Joints of pipe approximately 30 feet (9 meters) long are coupled together by means of tool joints.
constant pit-level method
A method of killing a well in which the mud level in the pits is held constant while the choke size is reduced and the pump speed slowed. It is not effective, and therefore, is not recommended, because casing pressure increases to the point at which the formation fractures or casing ruptures, and control of the well is lost.
circulate
To pass from one point throughout a system and back to the starting point. For example, drilling fluid is circulated out of the suction pit, down the drill pipe and drill collars, out the bit, up the annulus, and back to the pits while drilling proceeds.
mud weight
A measure of the density of a drilling fluid expressed as pounds per gallon, pounds per cubic foot, or kilograms per cubic meter. Mud weight is directly related to the amount of pressure the column of drilling mud exerts at the bottom of the hole.
mole
The fundamental unit of mass of a substance. A mole of any substance is the number of grams or pounds indicated by its molecular weight. For example, water has a molecular weight of approximately 18. Therefore, a gram-mole of water is 18 grams of water; a poundmole or water is 18 pounds of water. See molecular weight.
relative density
1. the ratio of the weight of a given volume of a substance at a given temperature to the weight of an equal volume of a standard substance at the same temperature. For example, if 1 cubic inch of water at 39 degrees F weighs 1 unit and 1 cubic inch of another solid or liquid at 39 degrees F weight 0.95 unit, then the relative density of the substance is 0.95. In determining the relative density of gases, the comparison is made with the standard of air or hydrogen.
mud pump
A large, high-pressure reciprocating pump used to circulate the mud on a drilling rig. A typical mud pump is a two-cylinder, double-acting or a three-cylinder, single-acting piston pump whose pistons travel in replaceable liners and are driven by a crankshaft actuated by an engine or a motor. Also called a slush pump.
gravity - specific
Density expressed as the ratio of the weight of a volume of substance to the weight of an equal volume of another standard substance. In the case of liquids and solids, the standard is water. In the case of natural gas or other gas materials, the standard is air.
packer squeeze method
A squeeze cementing method in which a packer is set to form a seal between the working string (the pipe down which cement is pumped) and the casing. Another packer or a cement plug is set below the point to be squeeze-cemented. By setting packers, the squeeze point is isolated from the rest of the well. See packer, squeeze cementing.
epm or equivalents per million
Unit chemical weight of solute per million unit weights of solution. The epm of a solute in solution is equal to the ppm (parts per million) divided by the equivalent weight.
steam drive
A method of improved recovery in which steam is injected into a reservoir through injection wells and driven toward production wells. The steam reduces the viscosity of crude off, causing it to flow more freely. The heat vaporizes lighter hydrocarbons; as they move ahead of the steam, they cool and condense into liquids that dissolve and displace crude oil The steam provides additional gas drive. This method is used to recover viscous oils. Also called continuous steam injection or steam flooding.
pilot testing
A method of predicting behavior of mud
conventional completion
A method for completing a well in which tubing is set inside 4-1/2-inch or larger casing.
snub
1. to force pipe or tools into a high-pressure well that has not been killed (i.e., to run pipe or tools into the well against pressure when the weight of pipe is not great enough to force the pipe through the BOPs). Snubbing usually requires an array of wireline bocks and wire rope that forces the pipe or tools into the well through a stripper head or blowout preventer until the weight of the string is sufficient to overcome the lifting effect of the well pressure on the pipe in the preventer. In workover operations, snubbing is usually accomplished by using hydraulic power to force the pipe through the stripping head or blowout preventer.
points
A method for indicating hook load or force, read off rig's indicator; 1 point = 1,000 pounds
overpull
Pull on pipe over and beyond its weight in either air or fluid
neutral
Position of the rig's weight indicator where hook load is zero.
weight
1. in mud terminology, refers to the density of a drilling fluid.
plunger lift
A method of lifting oil using a swab or free piston propelled by compressed gas from the lower end of the tubing string to the surface.
well completion
1. the activities and methods of preparing a well for the production of oil and gas or for other purposes, such as injection; the method by which one or more flow paths for hydrocarbons are established between the reservoir and the surface.
weight cut
The amount by which drilling fluid density is reduced by entrained formation fluids or air.
single-grip
Used to describe packers with one slip system for supporting weight and pressure from above only.
chemical cutoff
A method of severing steel pipe in a well by applying high-pressure jets of a very corrosive substance against the wall of the pipe. The resulting cut is very smooth.
sodium polyacrylate
A synthetic high-molecular-weight polymer of acrylonitrile used primarily as a fluid loss control agent
polished rod
The topmost portion of a string of sucker rods. It is used for lifting fluid by the rod-pumping method. It has a uniform diameter and is smoothly polished to seal pressure effectively in the stuffing box attached to the top of the well.
tension tool
A retrievable or drillable packer in which sufficient pipe weight is not available to set the tool in compression.
hesitation squeeze
A method of squeeze cementing in which cement is pumped in and the pumps are stopped for a few minutes. Pumping is started and stopped until the desired pressure is obtained.
riser margin
The slight increase in mud weight used to offset friction losses that occur as the mud is circulated through the riser.
safety clamp
A device used to suspend a rod string after the pump has been spaced or when the weight of the rod string must be taken off the pumping equipment.
fluid density
The unit weight of fluid, e.g., pounds per gallon.
hook load
The weight of the drill stem that is suspended from the hook.
Schlumberger (pronounced "slumberjay")
One of the pioneer companies in electric well logging, named for the French scientist who first developed the method. Today, many companies provide logging services of all kinds.
cut drilling fluid
Well-control fluid that has been reduced in density or unit weight as a result of entrainment of less-dense formation fluids or air
tubingless completion
A method of producing a well in which only production casing is set through the pay zone, with no tubing or inner production string used to bring formation fluids to the surface. This type of completion has its best application in low-pressure, dry-gas reservoirs.
soap
The sodium or potassium salt of a high-molecular weight fatty acid. Commonly used in drilling fluids to improve lubrication, emulsification, sample size, and defoaming.
mud density
Weight per unit volume of drilling fluid usually expressed in pounds per gallon or pounds per cubic foot. See hydrostatic pressure.
pressure-integrity test
A method of determining the amount of pressure that is allowed to appear on the casing pressure gauge as a kick is circulated out of a well. In general, it is determined by slowly pumping mud into the well while it is shut in and observing the pressure at which the formation begins to take mud.
gravel-pack packer
A packer used for the well completion method of gravel packing.
clay extender
Any of several substances--usually organic compounds of high molecular weight--that, when added in low concentrations to a bentonite or to certain other clay slurries, will increase the viscosity of the system. See low-solids mud.
gravel packing
A method of well completion in which a slotted or perforated liner, often wire-wrapped, is placed in the well and surrounded by gravel. If open hole, the well is sometimes enlarged by underreaming at the point where the gravel is packed. The mass of gravel excludes sand from the wellbore but allows continued production.
pump liner
A cylindrical, accurately machined, metallic section that forms the working barrel of some reciprocating pumps. Liners are an inexpensive means of replacing worn cylinder surface, and in some pumps they provide a method of conveniently changing the displacement and capacity of the pumps.
squeeze cementing
The forcing of cement slurry by pressure to specified points in a well to cause seals at the points of squeeze. It is a secondary cementing method that is used to isolate a producing formation, seal off water, repair casing leaks, and so forth.
gravity survey
An exploration method in which an instrument that measures the intensity of the earth's gravity is passed over the surface or through the water. In places where the instrument detects stronger or weaker than normal gravity forces, a geologic structure containing hydrocarbons may exist.
calcium
One of the alkaline earth elements with a valence of 2 and an atomic weight of about 40. Calcium compounds are a common cause of water hardness. Calcium is also a component of lime, gypsum, and limestone.
sand control
Any method by which large amounts of sand in a sandy formation are prevented from entering the wellbore. Sand in the wellbore can cause plugging and premature wear of well equipment. See gravel pack, sand consolidation, screen liner.
string shot
An explosive method utilizing primacord, which is an instantaneous textile-covered fuse with a core of very high explosive. It is used to create an explosive jar inside st5uck drill pipe or tubing so that the pipe may be backed off at the joint immediately above where it is stuck.
rod hook
A small swivel hook having a fast-operating automatic latch to close the hook opening when weight is suspended from the hook.
stripping in
1. the process of lowering the drill stem into the wellbore when the well is shut in on a kick and when the weight of the drill stem is sufficient to overcome the force of well pressure.
pickle
A cylindrical or spherical device that is affixed to the end of a wireline just above the hook to keep the line straight and to provide weight. v: to soak metal pieces in a chemical solution to remove dirt and scale from the metal's surface.
potassium
One of the alkali metal elements with a valence of 1 and an atomic weight of about 39. Potassium compounds, most commonly potassium hydroxide (KOH), are sometimes added to drilling fluids to impart special properties, usually inhibition.
rotary drilling
A drilling method in which a hole is drilled by a rotating bit to which a downward force is applied. The bit is fastened to and rotated by the drill stem, which also provides a passageway through which the drilling fluid is circulated. Additional joints of drill pipe are added as drilling progresses.
ballast
2. for mobile offshore drilling rigs, weight added to make the rig more seaworthy, increase its draft, or sink it to the seafloor. Seawater is usually used for ballast, but sometimes concrete or iron is used additionally to lower the rig's center of gravity permanently.
formation testing
The gathering of pressure data and fluid samples from a formation to determine its production potential before choosing a completion method. Testing tools include formation testers and drill stem test tools.
shear ram
The component in a blowout preventer that cuts, or shears, through drill pipe and forms a seal against well pressure. Shear rams are used in floating offshore drilling operations to provide a quick method of moving the rig away from the hole when there is no time to trip the drill stem out of the hole.
Martin-Decker
A common term for a rig weight indicator. Martin-Decker is the name of a company.
trip margin
The small amount of additional mud weight carried over that needed to balance formation pressure to overcome the pressure-reduction effects caused by swabbing when a trip out of the hole is made.
displacement
1. the weight of a fluid (such as water) displaced by a freely floating or submerged body (such as an offshore drilling rig). if the body floats, the displacement equals the weigh of the body.
guy line anchor
A buried weight or anchor to which a guy line is attached. See deadman.
cyclone
2. a device for the separation of various particles from a drilling fluid, most commonly used as a desander. The fluid is pumped tangentially into a cone, and the fluid rotation provides enough centrifugal force to separate particles by mass weight.
barite
Barium sulfate; a mineral frequently used to increase the weight or density of drilling mud. Its relative density is 4.2 (or 4.2 times denser than water). See barium sulfate, mud.
drill collar
A heavy, thick-walled tube, usually steel, used between the drill pipe and the bit in the drill stem to provide a pendulum effect to the drill stem and weight to the bit.
magnetic survey
An exploration method in which an instrument that measure the intensity of the natural magnetic forces existing in the earth's subsurface is passed over the surface or through the water. The instrument can detect deviations in magnetic forces, and such deviations may indicate the existence of an underground hydrocarbon reservoir.
cable-tool drilling
A drilling method in which the hole is drilled by dropping a sharply pointed bit on bottom. The bit is attached to a cable, and the cable is repeatedly dropped as the hole is drilled.
dynamic positioning
A method by which a floating offshore drilling rig is maintained in position over an offshore well location without the use of mooring anchors. Generally, several propulsion units, called thrusters, are located on the hulls of the structure and are actuated by a sensing system. A computer to which the system feeds signals directs the thrusters to maintain the rig on location.
open-hole completion
A method of preparing a well for production in which no production casing or liner is set opposite the producing formation. Reservoir fluids flow unrestricted into the open wellbore. An open-hole completion has limited use in rather special situations. Also called a barefoot completion.
gas-cut mud
A drilling mud that contains entrained formation gas, giving the mud a characteristically fluffy texture. Then entrained gas in not released before the fluid returns to the well, the weight or density of the fluid column is reduced. Because a large amount of gas in mud lowers its density, gas-cut mud must be treated to reduce the chance of a kick.
blowout preventer control unit
A device that stores hydraulic fluid under pressure in special containers and provides a method to open and close the blowout preventers quickly and reliably. Usually, compressed air and hydraulic pressure provide the opening and closing force in the unit. See blowout preventer.
miscible flood
An oil-recovery process which involves the injection of a solvent followed by a displacing fluid. - A method of secondary recovery of fluids from a reservoir by injection of fluids that are miscible with the reservoir fluids.
gun-perforate
To create holes in casing and cement set through a productive formation. A common method of completing a well is to set casing through the oil-bearing formation and cement it. A perforating gun is then lowered into the hole and fired to detonate high-powered jets or shoot steel projectiles (bullets) through the casing and cement and into the pay zone. The formation fluids flow out of the reservoir through the perforations and into the wellbore. See perforating gun.
modular-spaced workover rig
Workover equipment designed in equipment packages or modules that are light enough to be lifted onto an offshore platform by a platform crane. In most cases, the maximum weight of a module of 12,000 pounds. Once lifted from the work boat, the rig can be erected and working within twenty-four to thirty-six hours.
weight
2. of a measurement, expresses degree of confidence in result of measurement of a certain quantity compared with result of another measurement of the same quantity.
waterflooding
A method of improved recovery in which water is injected into a reservoir to remove additional quantities of oil that have been left behind after primary recovery. Waterflooding usually involves the injection of water through wells specially set up for water injection and the removal of water and oil from production wells drilled adjacent to the injection wells.
density
The mass or weight of a substance per unit volume. For instance, the density of a drilling mud may be 10 pounds per gallon (ppg), 74.8 pounds per cubic foot (lb/ft), or 1,198.2 kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m3). Specific gravity, relative density, and API gravity are other units of density.
sidewall coring
A coring technique in which core samples are obtained from the hole wall in a zone that has already been drilled. A hollow bullet is fired into the formation wall to capture the core and then retrieved on a flexible steel cable. Core samples of this type usually range from 3/4 to 1-3/16 inches (20 to 30 millimeters) in diameter and from 3/4 to 4 inches (20 to 100 millimeters) in length. This method is especially useful in soft-rock areas.
directional survey
A logging method that records rift angle, or deflection from the vertical, and direction of the drift. A single-shot directional-survey instrument makes a single photograph of a compass reading of the draft direction and the number of degrees the hole is off vertical. A multishot survey instrument obtains numerous readings in the hole as the device is pulled out of the well. See directional drilling.
equivalent circulating density (ECD)
The increase in bottomhole pressure expressed as an increase in pressure that occurs only when mud is being circulated. Because of friction in the annulus as the mud is pumped, bottomhole pressure is slightly, but significantly, higher than when the mud is not being pumped. ECD is calculated by dividing the annular pressure loss by 0.052, dividing that by true vertical depth, and adding the result to the mud weight.
rotating head
A sealing device used to close off the annular space around the kelly in drilling with pressure at the surface, usually installed above the main blowout preventers. A rotating head makes it possible to drill ahead even when there is pressure in the annulus that the weight of the drilling fluid is not overcoming; the head prevents the well from blowing out. It is used mainly in the drilling of formations that have low permeability. The rate of penetration through such formations is usually rapid.
spear
A fishing tool used to retrieve pipe lost in a well. The spear is lowered down the hole and into the lost pipe. When weight, torque, or both are applied to the string to which the spear is attached, the slips in the spear expand and tightly grip the inside of the wall of the lost pipe. Then the string, spear, and lost pipe are pulled to the surface.
concrete gravity platform rig
A rigid offshore drilling platform built of steel-reinforced concrete and used to drill development wells. The platform is floated to the drilling site in a vertical position, and at the site tall caissons that serve as the foundation of the platform are flooded so that the platform submerges and comes to rest on bottom. Because of the enormous weight of the platform, the force of gravity alone keeps it in place. See platform rig.
packer
A piece of downhole equipment, consisting of a sealing device, a holding or setting device, and an inside passage for fluids, used to block the flow of fluids through the annular space between the tubing and the wall of the wellbore by sealing off the space between them. It is usually made up in the tubing string some distance above the producing zone. A packing element expands to prevent fluid flow except through the inside bore of the packer and into the tubing. Packers are classified according to configuration, use, and method of setting and whether or not they are retrievable (that is, whether they can be removed when necessary, or whether they must be milled or drilled out and thus destroyed).
hook
A large, hook-shaped device from which the swivel is suspended. It is designed to carry maximum loads ranging from 100 to 650 tons (90 to 590 tonnes) and turns on bearings in its supporting housing. A strong spring within the assembly cushions the weight of a stand (90 feet, about 27 meters) of drill pipe, thus permitting the pipe to be made up and broken out with less damage to the tool join threads. Smaller hooks without the spring are used for handling tubing and sucker rods. See stand and swivel.
seismic survey
An exploration method in which strong low-frequency sound waves are generated on the surface or in the water to find subsurface rock structures that may contain hydrocarbons. The sound waves travel through the layers of the earth's crust; however, at formation boundaries some of the waves are reflected back to the surface where sensitive detectors pick them up. Reflections from shallow formations arrive at the surface sooner than reflections from deep formations, and since the reflections are recorded, a record of the depth and configuration of the various formations can be generated. Interpretation of the record can reveal possible hydrocarbon-bearing formations.
cement bond survey
An acoustic survey or sonic logging method that records the quality or hardness of the cement used in the annulus to bond the casing and the formation. Casing that is well bonded to the formation transmits an acoustic signal quickly; poorly bonded casing transmits a signal slowly. See acoustic survey, acoustic well logging.
hook-wall packer
A packer equipped with friction blocks or drag springs and slips and designed so that rotation of the pipe unlatches the slips. The friction springs prevent the slips from turning with the pipe and assist in advancing the slips up a tapered sleeve to engage the wail of the outside pipe as weight is put on the packer. Also called a wall-hook packer. See packer.
drill stem test (DST)
The conventional method of formation testing. The basic drill stem test tool consists of a packer or packers, valve or ports that may be opened and closed from the surface, and two or more pressure-recording devices. The tool is lowered on the drill string to the zone to be tested. The packer or packers are set to isolate the zone from the drilling fluid column. The valves or ports are then opened to allow for formation flow while the recorders chart static pressures. A sampling chamber traps dean formation fluids at the end of the test. Analysis of the pressure charts is an important part of formation testing.
tool joint
A heavy coupling element for drill pipe. It is made of special ahoy steel and has coarse, tapered threads and seating shoulders designed to sustain the weight of the drill stem, withstand the strain of frequent coupling and uncoupling, and provide a leakproof seal. The male section of the joint, or the pin, is attached to one end of a length of drill pipe, and the female section, or box, is attached to the other end. The tool joint may be welded to the end of the pipe, screwed on, or both. A hard-metal facing is often applied in a band around the outside of the tool joint to enable it to resist abrasion from the walls of the borehole.
formation fracturing
A method of stimulating production by opening new flow channels in the rock surrounding a production well. Often call a frac job. Under extremely high hydraulic pressure, a fluid (such as distillate, diesel fuel, crude oil, dilute hydrochloric acid, water, or kerosene) is pumped downward through production tubing or drill pipe and forced out below a packer or between two packers. The pressure causes cracks to open in the formation, and the fluid penetrates the formation through the cracks. Sand grains, aluminum pellets, walnut shells, or similar materials (propping agents) are carried in suspension by the fluid into the cracks. When the pressure is released at the surface, the fracturing fluid returns to the well. The cracks partially close on the pellets, leaving channels for oil to flow around them to the well. See explosive fracturing, hydraulic fracturing.
micellar-polymer flooding
A method of improved oil recovery in which chemicals dissolved in water are pumped into a reservoir through injection wells to mobilize off left behind after primary or secondary recovery and to move it toward production wells. The chemical solution includes surfactants or surfactant-forming chemicals that reduce the interfacial and capillary forces between oil and water, releasing the oil and carrying it out of the pores where it has been trapped. The solution may also contain cosurfactants to match the viscosity of the solution to that of the oil to stabilize the solution and to prevent its absorption by reservoir rock. An electrolyte is often added to aid in adjusting viscosity. Injection of the chemical solution is followed by a slug of water thickened with a polymer, which pushes the released oil through the reservoir, decreases the effective permeability of established channels so that new channels are opened, and serves as a mobility buffer between the chemical solution and the final injection of water.