Oil & Gas Glossary 1.0
OIL & GAS TECHNICAL TERMS GLOSSARY
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Search Result for Cubic Foot Cu Ft
mud weight
A measure of the density of a drilling fluid expressed as pounds per gallon, pounds per cubic foot, or kilograms per cubic meter. Mud weight is directly related to the amount of pressure the column of drilling mud exerts at the bottom of the hole.
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.
mud density
Weight per unit volume of drilling fluid usually expressed in pounds per gallon or pounds per cubic foot. See hydrostatic pressure.
barrel (bbl)
1. a measure of volume for petroleum products in the United States. One barrel is the equivalent of 42 U.S. gallons or 0.15899 cubic meters (9,702 cubic inches). One cubic meter equals 6.2897 barrels.
gas-oil ratio
A measure of the volume of gas produced with oil, expressed in cubic feet per barrel of cubic meters per tonne.
absolute humidity
The amount of moisture present in the air, usually expressed in grains of water per 100 cubic feet of air (milligrams of water per cubic meter of air).
sky-top mast
A mast on a well servicing unit that utilizes a split traveling block and crown block, which makes it possible to pull 60-foot stands with a 50-foot mast.
double-post mast
A well-servicing unit whose mast consists of two steel tubes. Double-pole masts provide racking platforms for handling rods and tubing in stands and extend from 65 to 67 feet (20 meters) so that rods can be suspended as 50-foot (15 meter) doubles and tubing set back as 30-foot (9-meter) singles. See pole mast.
pressure gradient
1. a scale of pressure differences in which there is a uniform variation of pressure from point to point. For example, the pressure gradient of a column of water is about 0.433 pounds per square inch per foot (9.794 kilopascals per meter) of vertical elevation. The normal pressure gradient in a formation is equivalent to the pressure exerted at any given depth by a column of 10 percent salt water extending from that depth to the surface 0.465 pounds per square inch per foot or 10.518 kilopascals per meter).
psi/ft
Abbreviation: pounds per square inch per foot.
Mcf/d
Abbreviation: 1,000 cubic feet of gas per day.
cc
Abbreviation: cubic centimeter
relative density
1. the ratio of the weight of a given volume of a substance at a given temperature to the weight of an equal volume of a standard substance at the same temperature. For example, if 1 cubic inch of water at 39 degrees F weighs 1 unit and 1 cubic inch of another solid or liquid at 39 degrees F weight 0.95 unit, then the relative density of the substance is 0.95. In determining the relative density of gases, the comparison is made with the standard of air or hydrogen.
rate of penetration (ROP)
A measure of the speed at which the bit drills into formations, usually expressed in feet (meters) per hour or minutes per foot (meter).
Mcf
Abbreviation: 1,000 cubic feet of gas, commonly used to express the volume of gas produced, transmitted, or consumed in a given period.
funnel viscosity
Viscosity as measured by the Marsh funnel, based on the number of second it takes for 1,000 cubic centimeters of drilling fluid to flow through the funnel.
dehydrate
To remove water from a substance. Dehydration of crude oil is normally accomplished by treating with emulsion breakers. The water vapor in natural gas must be removed to meet pipeline requirements; a typical maximum allowable water vapor content is 7 pounds per million cubic feet per day.
darcy
N:a unit of measure of permeability. A porous medium has a permeability of 1 darcy when differential pressure of 1 atmosphere across a sample 1 centimeter long and 1 square centimeter in cross section will force a liquid of 1 centipoise of viscosity through the sample at the rate of 1 cubic centimeter per second. The permeability of reservoir rocks is usually so low that it is measured in millidarcys.
normal formation pressure
Formation fluid pressure equivalent to about 0.465 pounds per square foot of depth from the surface. If the formation pressure is 4,650 pounds per square inch at 10,000 feet, it is considered normal.
abnormal pressure
Pressure exceeding or falling below the normal pressure to be expected at a given depth. Normal pressure increases approximately 0.465 psi per foot of depth (10.5kPa per meter of depth). Thus, normal pressure at 10,000 feet is 4,650 psi; abnormal pressure at this depth would be higher or lower than 4,650 psi. See pressure gradient.
hydrostatic pressure
The force exerted by a body of fluid at rest. It increases directly with the density and the depth of the fluid and is expressed in pounds per square inch or kilopascals. The hydrostatic pressure of fresh water is 0.433 pounds per square inch per foot of depth (9.792 kilopascals per meter). In drilling, the term refers to the pressure exerted by the drilling fluid in the wellbore. In a water drive field, the term refers to the pressure that may furnish the primary energy for production.