Oil & Gas Glossary 1.0

HomeContact UsNovember 22, 2008
With 2000+ technical terms!

OIL & GAS TECHNICAL TERMS GLOSSARY

If you are looking for a definition of any technical terms in oil & gas field, then this site is yours.

Until now, we've collected around 2000 technical terms, but if this still not enough, and you've found any term that is not in our database, please contact us, and we will happily find it for you, or you can just check it again later, because every unsuccessful search will be recorded by our system for later update.

Thanks and happy searching ^^.

Search Result for Specific Gravity

gravity - API

The specific gravity or density of oil expressed in terms of a scale devised by the American Petroleum Institute. The lighter the oil, the greater the gravity; other factors being equal, the higher the API gravity, the better price the oil will bring.

specific gravity

See relative density

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.

gravitometer

A device for measuring and recording the specific gravity of a gas or liquid passing a point of measurement.

galena

Lead sulfide (PbS). Technical grades (specific gravity about 7) are used for increasing the density of drilling fluids to points impractical or impossible with barite.

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.

particle

A minute unit of matter, usually a single crystal, or of regular shape with a specific gravity approximately that of a single crystal

gravity drainage

The movement of fluids in a reservoir resulting from the force of gravity. In the absence of an effective water or gas drive, gravity drainage is an important source of energy to produce oil, and it may also supplement other types of natural drive. Also called segregation drive.

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.

hydrometer

An instrument with a graduated stem, used to determine the gravity of liquids. The liquid to be measured is placed in a cylinder, and the hydrometer dropped into it. It floats at a certain level in the liquid (high if the liquid is light, low if it is heavy), and the stem markings indicate the gravity of the liquid.

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.

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.

caisson

1. one of several columns made of steel or concrete, which serves as the foundation for a rigid offshore platform rig, such as the concrete gravity platform rig.

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.

ballast

1. for ships, water taken onboard into specific tanks to permit proper angle of repose of the vessel in the water, and to assure structural stability.

depthometer

A device used to measure the depth of a well or the depth at a specific point in a well (such as to the top of a liner or to a fish) by counting the turns of a calibrated wheel rolling on a wireline as it is lowered into or pulled out of the well.

dispersion

2. of aggregates, subdivision of aggregates. Dispersion increases the specific surface of the particle; hence, it results in an increase in viscosity and gel strength.

plug-back cementing

A secondary-cementing operation in which a plug of cement is positioned at a specific point in the well and allowed to set.

spot

To pump a designated quantity of a substance (such as acid or cement) into a specific interval in the well. For example, 10 barrels of diesel oil may be spotted around an area in the hole in which drill collars are stuck against the wall of the hole in an effort to free the collars.

field facility

An installation designed for one or more specific and limited extraction units, scrubbers, absorbers, drip points, conventional single or multiple stage separation units, LTX low temperature separators, and other types of separation and recovery equipment.

oil and gas separator

An item of production equipment used to separate liquid components of the well stream from gaseous elements. Separators are either vertical or horizontal and either cylindrical or spherical in shape. Separation is accomplished principally by gravity, the heavier liquids falling to the bottom and the gas rising to the top. A float valve or other liquid-level control regulates the level of oil in the bottom of the separator.

specific heat

The amount of heat required to cause a unit increase in temperature in a unit mass of a substance, expressed as numerically equal to the number of calories needed to raise the temperature of 1 gram of a substance by 1 degree C.

secondary cementing

Any cementing operation after the primary cementing operation. Secondary cementing includes a plug-back job, in which a plug of cement is positioned at a specific point in the well and allowed to set. Wells are plugged to shut off bottom water or to reduce the depth of the well for other reasons.

tongs

The large wrenches used to make up or break out drill pipe, casing, tubing, or other pipe; variously called casing tongs, pipe tongs, and so forth, according to the specific use. Power tongs are pneumatically or hydraulically operated tools that serve to spin the pipe up tight and, in some instances, to apply the final makeup torque.

platform rig

An immobile offshore structure from which development wells are drilled and produced. Platform rigs may be built of steel or concrete and may be either rigid or compliant. Rigid platform rigs, which rest on the seafloor, are the caisson-type platform, the concrete gravity platform, and the steel-jacket platform. Compliant platform rigs, which are used in deeper waters and yield to water and wind movements are the guyed-tower platform and the tension-leg platform.

positive-displacement meter

A mechanical fluid-measuring device that measures by filling and emptying chambers of a specific volume. The displacement of a fixed volume of fluid may be accomplished by the action of reciprocating or oscillating pistons, rotating vanes or buckets, rotating disks, or tanks or other vessels that automatically fill and empty. Also called a volume meter or volumeter.

sand content

The insoluble abrasive solids content of a drilling fluid rejected by a 200-mesh screen. usually expressed as the percentage bulk volume of sand in a drilling fluid. This test is an elementary type in that the retained solids are not necessarily silica and may not be altogether abrasive. For additional information concerning the kids of solids retained on the 200-mesh screen, more specific tests would be required. See mesh.

bottomhole pressure test

A test that measures the reservoir pressure of the well, obtained at a specific depth or at the midpoint of the producing zone. A flowing bottomhole pressure test measures pressure while the well continues to flow; a shut-in bottomhole pressure test measures pressure after the well has been shut in for a specified period of time. See bottomhole pressure, bottomhole pressure gauge.

Popular Oil & Gas Terms