Oil & Gas Glossary 1.0
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 Steam Flooding
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.
steam flooding
See steam drive
surfactant
A soluble compound that concentrates on the surface boundary between two substances such as oil and water and reduces the surface tension between the substances. The use of surfactants permits the thorough surface contact or mixing of substances that ordinarily remain separate. Surfactants are used in the petroleum industry as additives to drilling mud and to water during chemical flooding. See micellar-polymer flooding; surfactant mud
boiler
A closed pressure vessel with a furnace to burn coal, oil, or gas, used to generate steam from water.
stripper
3. a column wherein absorbed constituents are stripped from absorption off. The term is applicable to columns using a stripping medium, such as steam or gas.
pressure maintenance
Repressuring of an oil-field to maintain original pressure. The use of water flooding or natural gas recycling during primary recovery to provide additional formation pressure and displacement energy that can supplement and conserve natural reservoir drives. Although commonly begun during primary production, pressure maintenance methods are often considered to be a form of enhanced oil recovery.
polymer
A substance that consists of large molecules formed from smaller molecules in repeating structural units (monomers). In oilfield operations, various types of polymers are used to thicken drilling mud, fracturing fluid, acid, water, and other liquids. See micellar-polymer flooding, polymer mud. In petroleum refining, heat and pressure are used to polymerize light hydrocarbons into larger molecules, such as those that make up high-octane gasoline. In petrochemical production, polymer hydrocarbons are used as a feedstock for plastics.
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.