Oil & Gas Glossary 1.0
OIL & GAS TECHNICAL TERMS GLOSSARY
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Search Result for Friction
friction
Resistance to movement created when two surfaces are in contact. When friction is present, movement between the surfaces produces heat.
friction loss
A reduction in the pressure of a fluid caused by its motion against an enclosed surface (such as a pipe). As the fluid moves through the pipe, friction between the fluid and the pipe wall and within the fluid itself creates a pressure loss. The faster the fluid moves, the greater are the losses.
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.
abrasion
Wearing away by friction.
CLFP
Abbreviation: choke-line friction pressure.
persuader
A big tool for a small job, used to overcome some excess friction.
gall
Damage to steel surfaces caused by friction and improper lubrication.
riser margin
The slight increase in mud weight used to offset friction losses that occur as the mud is circulated through the riser.
pressure drop
A loss of pressure that results from friction sustained by a fluid passing through a line, valve, fitting, or other device.
barrel wrench
A friction wrench used in repairing oil-well pumps
drag blocks
Spring-loaded buttons on a packer that provide friction with casing to retard movement of one section of a packer while another section rotates for setting.
pressure loss
1. a reduction in the amount of force a fluid exerts against a surface, such as the walls of a pipe. It usually occurs because the fluid is moving against the surface and is caused by the friction between the fluid and the surface.
overshot
A fishing tool that is attached to tubing or drill pipe and lowered over the outside wall of pipe or sucker rods lost or stuck in the wellbore. A friction device in the overshot, usually either a basket or as spiral grapple, firmly grips the pipe, allowing the fish to be pulled from the hole.
viscosity
A measure of the resistance of a fluid to flow. Resistance is brought about by the internal friction resulting from the combined effects of cohesion and adhesion. The viscosity of petroleum products is commonly expressed in terms of the time required for a specific volume of the liquid to flow through a capillary tube of a specific size at a given temperature.
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.