ppe 2, introduction(lecture 1)
DESCRIPTION
petroluem introductionTRANSCRIPT
Petroleum Production Engineering II(ENG 3103M)
INTRODUCTION & COURSE TITLE
Dr Nejat Rahmanian
Name of Facilitator: Dr Nejat Rahmanian
Phone: 01274-23 4522E-mail: [email protected]: B1.12 (Chesham)
Lecture hours: 24 No of weeks: 12
Introduction
Time: Monday; 11:00‐13:00, Place:
Time/Place
Weeks 2 and 4 Chesham C1.03a
Weeks 3,5,6, 10 ‐13 Chesham B4.01
Week 7 Chesham B4.01 (Mid‐term test)
Weeks 8,9 Chesham C3.08 (computer room)
Course Information Credit Value: 10 Prerequisite: ENG2092M – Petroleum Production Eng. I
No. of students: 16 (As of 18 Sep. 2014 )
Quizzes 5%Assignment : 10%Mid-term Test: 15%Final Examination: 70%
Ground Rules
Practice & Practice
No Mobile Phones
"Petroleum Production Systems"M. Economides, D. Hill and C.E. Economides’ Prentice Hall Inc.
(Note: Available edition in library is: 1994)
Petroleum Production Engineering: A Computer-Assisted Approach’’,1st Edition; By Guo, Lyons, P.E. & Ghalambor, A., 2007.
Additional references:
‘’Applied Petroleum Reservoir Engineering’’; B. Craft, M. Hawkins and R. Terry, 2nd Ed. Prentice Hall inc.
‘’Reservoir Engineering Handbook’’ By: Tareq Ahmed ‘’ Fundamentals of Reservoir Engineering’’ By: L.P. Dake ‘’The Properties of Petroleum Fluids’’ By Wiliiam D. Mc Cain ‘’PVT and phase behaviors of petroleum reservoir fluids’’ By Ali Danesh
(2001), 2nd Edition, Elsevier Surface Production Operations: Design of Oil-Handling Systems
and Facilities, by Ken Arnold, Maurice Stewart (2008), 3rd Edition, Gulf Publishing Company. (ebook available in Library).
Key Reference
Objective of Production Engineering:To maximize well productivity considering :
• Cost effectiveness• Safety
Overview of a Petroleum Production Unit
The petroleum industry is usually divided into three major components: Upstream, midstream and downstream. Midstream operations are usually included in the downstream category.
UpstreamGas & Oil exploration and
production
DownstreamTreating, Selling &
Distribution
The upstream sector includes the searching for potential underground or underwater oil and gas fields, drilling of exploratory wells, and subsequently drilling and operating the wells that recover and bring the crude oil and/or raw natural gas to the surface.
The downstream oil sector refers to the selling and distribution of natural gas and products derived from crude oil.Such products include liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), gasoline or petrol, diesel oil, kerosene, fuel oil, asphalt, etc.
Upstream: Term commonly used to refer to the searching for and the recovery and production of crude oil and natural gas. The upstream oil sector is also known as the exploration and production (E&P) sector.
Midstream: Processes, stores, markets and transports commodities such as crude oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids (NGLs), and Liquefied Natural Gas (LNGs, mainly ethane, propane, and butane and sulphur.
Downstream: Term commonly used to refer to the refining of crude oil, and the selling and distribution of natural gas and products derived from crude oil.
s, The upstream oil & gas industry involves the extraction, recovery and delivery of energy sector products to so‐called ‘Downstream’ applications, where energy products are processed to make viable products.
Topics Introduction and role of petroleum engineersAn overview of reservoir engineering Reservoir fluid properties (continue from PPE-1) Reservoir rock propertiesProduction from under saturated oil reservoirs Production from two-phase reservoirsProduction from natural gas reservoirsWellbore flow performanceFlow in Chokes and horizontal pipes
Course ScheduleWeek 2 Introductory Lecture: Objectives, Scope, Oilfield UnitsWeek 3 Overview of Reservoir EngineeringWeek 4 Reservoir Fluid Properties (EOS), continued from PPE-1Week 5 Reservoir Rock Properties (porosity, permeability, etc.)Week 6 Reservoir Rock Properties (Continued)Week 7 Mid term testWeek 8 Production from Under- saturated Oil ReservoirsWeek 9 Production from Two Phase and Natural Gas ReservoirsWeek 10 Wellbore Flow PerformanceWeek 11 Well DeliverabilityWeek 12 Flow in Horizontal Pipes and Flow in ChokesWeek 13 Revision Week
Units for Reservoir and Production Engineering
Variable SI OilfieldMass 1 kg 2.2046225 lbmLength 0.3048 m 1 ftArea 4,046.873 m2 1 acre = 43,560 ft2Volume 1 m3 6.2898106 bbl
1 bbl = 5.614583 ft3Temperature 1 K 1.8 R
K = °C+273.15 R = °F+459.67°C = (°F-32)/1.8 °F = 1.8 °C+32
Pressure 6.894757 kPa 1 psi1 MPa 145.03774 psi101.325 kPa 1 atm = 14.69595 psi1 bar = 100 kPa 14.503774 psi
Dynamic viscosity 1 mPa·s 1 cpDensity 1000 kg/m3 62.42797 lbm/ft3
8.345405 lbm/galWater density @ 60°F/1 atm 999.04 kg/m3 62.368 lbm/ft3
Energy 1.055056 kJ 1 btu1 kWh 3412.14 btu
1 btu=778.169 ft·lbfPower 745.700 W 1 hp=550 ft·lbf/sMolecular weight of air 28.9625 kg/kmol 28.9625 lbm/lbmolPermeability 1 mm2 1013.25 md
http://www.peteng2.com/jmm/uni01.html and http://www.rigzone.com/calculator/
List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
API: American Petroleum Institutebbl: BarrelBpd: Barrel per dayGOR: Gas Oil RatioGOC: Gas Oil ContactScf: Standard cubic feetSTBO: Stock Tank Barrel OilSp.gr : Specific gravitySSSV: Sub-Surface Safety ValveSSV : Surface Safety ValveWOC: Water Oil Contact
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_acronyms_in_oil_and_gas_exploration_and_production
At the end of this course, students should be able to:
Desribe of Petroleum Production Engineering
Develop phase diagram of the reservoir based on EOS
Calculate pipeline performance (horizontal and vertical) and pressure drop across a Choke valve
Analyze performance of a production well (steady state, transient and psuedo-steady state)
Calculate rock properties
Course Outcomes
Questions and Answers
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