Oil & Gas Glossary 1.0

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OIL & GAS TECHNICAL TERMS GLOSSARY

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Search Result for Face Seal

face seal

A type of seal in which deformation of the seal is accomplished by a plate or flat surface (face).

packing elements

The set of dense rubber, washer-shaped pieces encircling a packer, which are designed to expand against casing or formation face to seal off the annulus.

O-ring

A circular seal common in the oilfield; requires deformation (squeeze) to energize and seal.

nonlocator

Term to describe the passage entry of seal assemblies into a packer seal bore not locking into place.

seal nipple assemblies

Sealing members at the production tubing for landing inside the packer's seal bore.

production seal unit

Same as seal nipple assemblies.

seal-bore extension

A tube extending the effective packer seal bore; used where excessive tubing expansion or contraction is anticipated.

casing seal receptacle

A casing sub containing a seal bore and a left-handed thread, run as a crossover between casing sizes, to provide a tubing anchor.

ram

The closing and sealing component on a blowout preventer. One of three types--blind, pipe, or shear--may be installed in several preventers mounted in a stack on top of the wellbore. Blind rams, when closed, form a seal on a hole that has no drill pipe in it; pipe rams, when closed, seal around the pipe; shear rams cut through drill pipe and then form a seal.

filtration qualities

The filtration characteristics of a drilling mud. In general, these qualities are inverse to the thickness of the filter cake deposited on the face of a porous medium and the amount of filtrate allowed to escape from the drilling fluid into or through the medium.

casing-patch tool

A special tool with a rubber packer or lead seal that is used to repair casing. When casing is damaged downhole, a cut is made below the damaged casing, the damaged casing and the casing above it are pulled from the well, and the damaged casing is removed from the casing string. The tool is made up and lowered into the well on the casing until it engages the top of the casing that remains in the well, and a rubber packer or lead seal in the tool forms a seal with the casing that is in the well. The casing-patch tool is an over-shot-like device and is sometimes called a casing overshot.

vee ring

An elastomer (seal) energized by pressure

mud-off

1. to seal the hole against formation fluids by allowing the buildup of wall cake.

pack-off

(v) to place a packer in the wellbore and activate it so that it forms a seal between the tubing and the casing.

gasket

Any material (i.e., paper, cork, asbestos, or rubber) used to seal two essentially stationary surfaces.

half mule shoe

A cutoff pup joint below a packer used as a fluid entry device and/or seal assemblies guide

gland

A device used to form a seal around a reciprocating or rotating rod (as in a pump) to prevent fluid leakage. Specifically, the movable part of a stuffing box by which the packing is compressed.

stripper head

A blowout prevention device consisting of a gland and packing arrangement bolted to the wellhead. It is often used to seal the annular space between tubing and casing.

slurry

1. in drilling, a plastic mixture of cement and water that is pumped into a well to harden. There it supports the casing and provides a seal in the wellbore to prevent migration of underground fluids.

cement plug

A portion of cement placed at some point in the wellbore to seal it. See cementing.

Bund-N

A nitrile rubber used throughout the oilfield as an elastometer seal, i.e., in O-rings, V-rings.

seal units

Extensions of the producing string with seals to travel within a packer bore and/or extensions.

blind ram

An integral part of a blowout preventer, which serves as the closing element on an open hole. Its ends do not fit around the drill pipe but seal against each other and shut off the space below completely. See ram

gunk squeeze

A bentonite and diesel oil mixture that is pumped down the drill pipe and into the annulus to mix with drilling mud. The stiff, putty-like material is squeezed into lost circulation zones to seal them.

lubricate

2. to lower or raise tools in or out of a well with pressure inside the well. The term comes from the fact that a lubricant (grease) is often used to provide a seal against well pressure while allowing wireline to move in or out of the well.

lubricator stack

2. to lower or raise tools in or out of a well with pressure inside the well. The term comes from the fact that a lubricant (grease) is often used to provide a seal against well pressure while allowing wireline to move in or out of the well.

barite plug

A settled volume of barite particles from a barite slurry placed in the wellbore, usually to seal off a pressured zone.

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.

packer-bore receptacle

A retrievable receptacle anchored into the top of a production packer to land a tubing seal assembly

ring-joint flange

A special type of flanged connection in which a metal ring (resting in a groove in he flange) serves as a pressure seal between the two flanges.

production packer

Any packer designed to make a seal between the tubing and the casing during production

swab cup

A rubber or rubber-like device on a special rod (a swab), which forms a seal between the swab and the wall of the tubing or casing.

ram blowout preventer

A blowout preventer that uses rams to seal off pressure on a hole that is with or without pipe. Also called a ram preventer.

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.

pack-off

(n) a device with an elastomer packing element that depends on pressure below the packing to effect a seal in the annulus. Used primarily to run or pull pipe under low or moderate pressures. This device is not dependable for service under high differential pressures. Also called a stripper.

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.

hanger plug

A device placed or hung in the casing below the blowout preventer stack to form a pressure tight seal. Pressure is then applied to the blowout preventer stack to test it for leaks

casing seal test

A procedure whereby the formation immediately below the casing shoe is subjected to a pressure equal to the pressure expected to be exerted later by a higher drilling glut density or by the sum of a higher drilling fluid density and back-pressure created by a kick.

change rams

To take rams out of a blowout preventer and replace them with rams of a different size or type. When the size of a drill pipe is changed, the size of the pipe rams must be changed to ensure that they seal around the pipe when closed (unless variable-bore pipe rams are in use).

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.

riser pipe

The pipe and special fittings used on floating offshore drilling rigs to establish a seal between the top of the wellbore, which is on the ocean floor, and the drilling equipment, located above the surface of the water. A riser pipe serves as a guide for the drill stem from the drilling vessel to the wellhead and as a conductor of drilling fluid from the well to the vessel. The riser consists of several sections of pipe and includes special devices to compensate for any movement of the drilling rig caused by waves. It is also called a marine riser.

ball-and-seat valve

A device used to restrict fluid flow to one direction. It consists of a polished sphere, or ball, usually or metal, and an annular piece, the seat, ground and polished to form a seal with the surface of the ball. Gravitational force or the force of a spring holds the ball against the seat. Flow in the direction of the force is presented, while flow in in the opposite direction overcomes the force and unseats the ball.

stuffing box

A device that prevents leakage along a piston, rod, propeller shaft, or other moving part that passes through a hole in a cylinder or vessel. It consists of a box or chamber made by enlarging the hole and a gland containing compressed packing. On a well being artificially lifted by means of a sucker rod pump, the polished rod operates through a stuffing box, preventing escape of oil and diverting it into a side outlet to which is connected the flow line leading to the oil and gas separator or to the field storage tank. For a bottomhole pressure test, the wireline goes through a stuffing box and lubricator, allowing the gauge to be raised and lowered against well pressure. The lubricator provides a pressure-tight grease seal in the stuffing box.

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.

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