Technical Thesaurus oil & gas

B

 

B.d.o.e.

Barrels/day oil equivalent. A convenient measure in comparing different primary fuels. One b.d.o.e. is equivalent to: 50 metric tonnes oil equivalent per annum or 76 metric tonnes of hard coal per annum or 2.1 10 BTU/annum.

B.o.e.

Barrels oil equivalent. One b.o.e. is equivalent to: 0.135 metric tonnes hard coal or 5.8 10 BTU.

Back off

To unscrew one threaded piece (as a section of pipe) from another.

Back pressure

The pressure resulting from restriction of full flow of liquids or gas.

Back pressure valve

A control valve which keeps a pre-set pressure in a system.

Back-up

A term used to describe the process whereby one section of drill pipe is held stationary using tongs while another section is screwed out of or into it.

Back-up line

A wire rope used to hold one set of tongs in place when two sections of drill pipe are being joined or separated.

Back-up post

A fixed post, column or stanchion to which the dead end of the back-up line is secured.

Baffle collar

A special casing collar with a reduced bore which serves as a stop for the bottom cementing plug. Usually installed 30 or 60 feet above the casing shoe.

Baffles

Plates or obstructions built into a tank or other vessel that change the direction of the flow of fluids or gases.

Bail

A cylindrical steel bar (similar to the handle or bail of a bucket, only much larger) that supports the swivel and connects it to the hook. Sometimes. the two cylindrical bars that support the elevators and attach them to the hook are called bails. To recover bottomhole fluids, samples or drill cuttings by lowering a cylindrical vessel called a bailer to the bottom of a well, filling it, and retrieving it. See bailer.

Bailer

A long cylindrical container, fitted with a valve at its lower end, used to remove water, sand. mud or oil from a well.

Ball and seat

The main parts of the valves in a plunger type oil well pump.

Ball joint

A connector in a subsea, marine riser assembly whose ball and socket design permits an angular deflection of the riser pipe caused by horizontal movement of the drillship or floating platform of 10° or so in all directions.

Ball valve

A type of quick-opening pipeline valve constructed with a bored-through rotating ball which seals against the valve seats, placed perpendicular to the valve bore in the valve's inlet and outlet ports. The valve can be opened or closed with a one-quarter turn of the ball.

Ballast

Material (usually sea water) used in place of, or in addition to, cargo to stabilise the ship. Ballast may be kept in separate compartments to cargo or replace it in the same compartments.

Ballast voyage

The voyage from the port where the cargo is discharged to the loading port.

Balling of the bit

The fouling of a rotary drilling bit in sticky, gumbo-like shale which causes a serious drag on the bit and sometimes loss of circulation.

Bar

Unit of pressure. One bar is equal to 987 etc.

Bar check

An echo sounder calibration method involving a bar lowered below the sounder at a known depth; considered old fashioned in some quarters.

Bar sweeping

A sweeping procedure using a beam suspended horizontally under a vessel. The sweep passing over the bottom may be equipped with rockers or other sensors to record contact with the bottom.

Bare boat charter

Charterer hires a vessel for a long period, appoints the master and crew, and pays all operating expenses.

Barefoot completion:

A completion method in which the casing is cemented down to a point immediately above the producing formation and the productive layer is left unsupported. Also called open-hole completion.

Barge

A non-self propelled vessel used as a base for drilling equipment, to carry cranes, support facilities, accommodation modules, etc., to lay underwater pipelines or to transport crude oil or its products over short distances.

Barite

Another name for barytes.

Barium sulfate

1. A chemical combination of barium. sulfur and oxygen. See barite.

2. A tenacious scale that is very difficult to remove.

Barometer

An instrument for determining atmospheric pressure.

Barrel

The unit of volume measurement used for petroleum and its products; 1 barrel = 42 U.S. gallons. 3S Imperial gallons (approx.). or 159 litres (approx.); 7.3 barrels = 1 ton (approx.); 6.29 barrels = 1 cubic metre.

Barrel wrench

A friction wrench used in repairing oil well pumps.

Barytes

Barium sulphate -a heavy mineral added to drilling mud in order to increase its specific gravity (weight).

Base

A substance that reacts with an acid to form a salt and water only.

Base sediment

Impurities and foreign matter contained in oil produced from a well.

Baseline

Usually a line between two fixed points.

  1. The crossing of a line (between beacons) is a calibration method of range/range navigation systems such as Syledis.
  2. . The baseline of an acoustic positioning system is the size of the sending or receiving transponder array.

Baseline extension

In radio location, the extension of the baseline beyond the transmitters.

Basement rock

Igneous or metamorphic rocks which underlie the sediment of a basin. Basement rock does not usually contain petroleum deposits. (Hydrocarbons have been found in fractured basement rocks in Venezuela.)

Basic petrochemical

One of the primary raw materials produced from crude oil by steam cracking or reforming. e.g. ethylene. benzene.

Basin

A synclinal structure in the subsurface. once the bed of a prehistoric sea. Basins. composed of sedimentary rock, are regarded as good prospects for oil exploration.

Basket sub

A fishing accessory run above a bit or mill to recover small pieces of metal or junk in a well.

Bastard

Any equipment of non-standard shape or size.

Bathymetric chart

See chart.

Bathymetry

The determination of ocean depths. The general configuration of sea floor as determined by profile analysis of depth data.

Beacon

A device that repetitively transmits a navigation signal (nowadays radio).

Beam

The walking beam of a pumping jack or unit.

Beam pumping

A method of artificial lift in which fluid is lifted by rods and pump actuated by the walking beam of a beam pumping unit.

Beam well

A well whose fluid is being lifted by rods and pump actuated by a walking beam.

Bearing

The horizontal direction of one terrestrial point from another, ex- pressed as the angular distance from a reference direction. It is usually measured from 0 degrees at the reference direction clockwise through 360 degrees. The terms bearing and azimuth are sometimes used inter- changeably, but in navigation the former customarily applies to terrestrial objects and the latter to the direction of a point on the celestial sphere from a point on the Earth. A bearing is designated as true, magnetic, or compass as the reference direction is true, magnetic, or compass north.

Bearing (great circle)

The initial direction of a great circle through two terrestrial points, ex- pressed as angular distance from a reference direction. Bearing obtained by any form of radiant energy are great-circle bearings.

Bearing (magnetic)

Bearing relative to magnetic north. Compass bearing corrected for magnetic deviation.

Bearing (outboard)

A shaft-supporting bearing outside the body or frame of a pump's gear box or engine's crankcase, a bearing on a pump's pinion shaft outside the gear box, a line-shaft bearing.

Bearing (relative)

Bearing relative to the heading of a craft.

Bearing (saddle)

A type of bearing for the support of a heavy, slow-moving member, e.g. the wide bearing on the samson post that supports the well's walking beam as it oscillates or rocks up and down.

Bearing (stirrup)

A bearing and its frame in the shape of a saddle stirrup, e.g. the bearing connecting the pitman and the walking beam on an early-day cable tool drilling or pumping well.

Bearing (true)

See bearing.

Bed

A geological term describing a stratum (layer of sediment or sedimentary rock) of considerable thickness and uniform composition and texture.

Bedrock

The firm base rocks into which a structure is anchored.

Bell nipple

1. A large swage nipple for attaching casing head fittings to the well's casing above the ground or at the surface. The bell nipple is threaded on the casing end and has a plain or weld-end to take the casing head valves.

2. The flow conduit above the BOP stack, which has a belled out top section to allow easy passage of the bit.

Belt

A flexible band or cord connecting and passing about each of two or more pulleys to transmit power or impart motion.

Bench marks (benchmarks)

A permanent, stable object containing a marked point of known elevation with respect to a datum used as a reference level for tidal observations or as a control point for levelling.

Bends

A serious (or even fatal) condition suffered by divers who are decompressed too quickly -caused by nitrogen bubbles forming in the blood.

Bentonite

Clay added to drilling mud; also called smectite or gel.

Benzene

An unsaturated ring compound with delocalised electrons containing six carbon atoms (C6H6); one of the most important petroleum-derived raw materials used in the chemical industry.

Berth

The jetty, pier or wall at which the ship moors for loading or discharging. Hence .'berthing'. and .'inberthing" for reaching and leaving the berth.

Bevelled coupling

Coupling with (non standard) bevelled ends used to avoid hanging up when running parallel strings.

Bill of lading

A document which is a receipt for cargo received on board and is evidence of the contract between shipper and shipowner. It is also evidence of title to the goods described on it.

Biomass

With the word biomass we mean the non-fossil materials of biological origin: agricultural and forest residues, waste from the agricultural food and wood industry, livestock waste, the organic part of urban waste and specific crops for producing energy. The energy contained in the biomass is solar energy "fixed" by plants through photosynthesis with the chlorophyll. The biomass, produced and used in a cyclical way: is a renewable and environmentally-friendly energy resource. The use of biomass produces valuable benefits on the environment and is part of an energy and agricultural policy aiming at diversifying the sources of energy. Biomass has no negative impact on the greenhouse effect since carbon dioxide, released during the combustion, is reabsorbed by plants through the process of photosynthesis with the chlorophyll.

Bird cage

Flattened and spread strands in a wire rope.

BIS

Bank for International Settlements

Bit

See drill bit.

Bit-breaker

A heavy metal plate which fits in the drilling table and is used to hold the drill bit while it is being unscrewed from the drill collar.

Bitmap

A Bitmap is an image captured from the incoming video stream and stored on the hard disk as a windows file.

Bit-record

A report on each bit used in a drilling operation that lists the bit type, the amount of footage the bit has drilled, and the nature of the formation penetrated.

Bitumen

A mixture of extremely heavy hydrocarbons obtained from the residue refining process; used for road surfacing, roofing, etc.

Black oils

A generic term for the heavier and darker coloured petroleum products, particularly residual fuel oils of particular significance in relation to transportation and storage since black oils are viscous and may often require insulated or heated storage or transfer facilities.

Blanketing

To replace the air in or around process equipment with an inert gas, such as nitrogen, to reduce oxidation, explosion or fire hazards.

Bleeding

To withdraw from a line or vessel a small portion of the contained liquid at a slow rate.

Blind auction

See sealed bid auction.

Blind box

A solid steel bar, flat on the bottom and hardened, used in wireline work when heavy downward blows have to be given.

Blind flange

A flange without centre-hole, used to seal off a section of pipe.

Blind ram

An integral part of a blowout preventer that serves as the closing element. Its ends do not fit around the drill pipe but seal against each other and shut off the space below completely.

Block

See licence block

Block grease

A grease of high melting point that can be handled in block or stick form. Block grease is used on large, slow-moving machinery, on axles and crude bearings. In contact with a hot journal bearing, the grease melts slowly, lubricating the bearing.

Block number

The number assigned to a particular licence block or subdivision there of in a given national sector of the continental shelf.

Block valve

A valve which allows isolating a section of pipeline or part of an installa- tion, e.g. on a crude oil or products trunk line placed on each side of a pipeline river crossing to isolate possible leaks at the crossing.

Blocks

The block and tackle system in a derrick that is used to raise and lower the drill string. See crown block and travelling block.

Blocks

The blocks and tackle system in a derrick that is used raise and lower the drill - see crown block and travelling block.

Blooey line

The discharge pipe from a well being drilled by air drilling. The blooey line is used to conduct the air or gas used for circulation away from the rig to reduce the fire hazard as well as to transport the cuttings a suitable distance from the well. See air drilling.

Blow moulding

A plastic-forming process that makes use of compressed air to shape the final product by expanding it to fit the mould.

Blowing a well

Opening a well to let it blow for a short period to free the well tubing or casing of accumulations of water, sand, or other deposits.

Blowout

The situation that occurs when gas, oil or salt water escapes in an uncontrolled manner from a well due either to a release of pressure in the reservoir rock that the various containment systems fail to check or to the failure of the containment systems during production.

Blowout preventer (BOP)

A hydraulically operated wellhead device designed to ensure that a blowout cannot occur.

Boiling point

The temperature of a liquid at which its vapour pressure equals the external pressure. Boiling liquids are normally quoted for standard atmospheric pressure. At a fixed pressure, a liquid will not exceed its I boiling point and further heating merely converts more liquid to vapour.

Boll-weevil

Slang for an inexperienced rig or oil field worker, sometimes shortened to weevil. Also a bowl-type tubing hanger.

Bomb

A thick-walled container, usually steel, used to hold samples of oil or gas under pressure. See bottomhole pressure.

Bond

A chemical bond is the link by which atoms are joined together in a molecule.

Bonded goods

Imported goods deposited in a Government warehouse until duty is paid.

Bonnet

The upper part of a valve that encloses the packing gland.

Boom

A structure used to support a pipeline during laying (see stinger) or to confine an oil slick (see containment boom).

Boomer

A medium energy acoustic profiling source; towed at surface or deep; data is recorded in analogue mode; multiple of water depth: tens of metres. Seismic instrument for shallow penetration work; the boomer transducer produces acoustic pulses by the motion of a metal plate in the water.

Booster platform

A platform built part of the way along an mould oil or gas underwater pipeline in order to boost the pumping process.

Booster station

An intermediate pumping station usually on a main line or trunk line, which receives crude from an upstream section and discharges it into a downstream section of the line.

Booth

A tall section of large diameter pipe inside or outside a (usually) dehydration tank which acts as a surge vessel and atmospheric separator for the crude oil before it enters the tank.

BOP stack

Blowout preventer stack. An assembly of blowout preventers and associated equipment mounted on the well-head for the purpose of controlling down hole pressure. A typical stack would comprise riser connector, an annular blowout preventer, kill and choke line connectors, drilling spool and well-head connector. These components may be arranged in many different configurations and have pressure ratings to suit particular requirements, depending on the drilling programme and whether control is effected manually or remotely.

Borehole

The well bore; the hole made by drilling or boring. See well bore.

Bottom profiler

An echo sounder for precision surveys of the sea bottom surface.

Bottom sample

A portion of the sea bottom material brought to the surface for examination.

Bottomhole

The lowest or deepest part of a well, pertaining to the bottom of the well bore.

Bottomhole assembly (BHA)

The lower end of the drill string comprising the drill bit, drill collars, heavyweight drill pipe and ancillary equipment.

Bottomhole choke

A device with a restricted opening placed in the lower end of the tubing to control the rate of flow. See choke.

Bottomhole pressure

1. The pressure at the bottom of a borehole. It is caused by the hydrostatic pressure of the drilling fluid in the hole and, sometimes, any back-pressure held at the surface as when the well is shut in with blowout preventers. When mud is being circulated, bottom hole pressure is the hydrostatic pressure plus the remaining circulating pressure required to move the mud up the annulus.

2. The pressure in a well at a point opposite the producing formation, as recorded by a bottomhole pressure bomb.

Bottoms

A term used to describe the heavy portion of the feed to a distillation operation. This is the part which does not vapourise during the operation. Storage tank "bottoms" refers to the accumulation of sediment, mud and water.

Bourdon gauge

An instrument for measuring the pressure of steam or other gases.

Box

The female section of a tool joint. See tool joint.

Brackish water

Water containing low concentrations of any soluble salts.

Brake

A device for arresting the motion of a mechanism, usually by means of friction, as in the drawworks brake. Compare electrodynamic brake and hydromatic brake.

Break circulation

To start movement of the drilling or workover fluid after it has been quiescent in the hole.

Breakout

The process whereby one section of drill pipe is unscrewed from another; sometimes also used to refer to promotions within the drilling team.

Breakout cathead

A device attached to the shaft of the drawworks that is used as a power source for unscrewing drill pipe; usually located opposite the driller's side of the drawworks. See cathead.

Breakout tongs

Tongs that are used to start unscrewing one section of pipe from another section, especially drill pipe coming out of the hole. Also called lead tongs. See tongs.

Breathing apparatus

Devices which provide a worker with a supply of air independent of the atmosphere around him.

Brent blend

The principle grade of U.K. North Sea crude oil in international oil trading, originating from the Brent and other fields of the East Shetland Basin and brought ashore by pipeline at Sullom Voe in the Shetlands. Quoted on a basis f.o.b. Sullom Voe. Used as the "marker" for other North Sea grades which trade at differentials to it, reflecting quality and location.

Bridge

An obstruction in a well formed by intrusion of subsurface formations, or in tubing by formation sand.

Bridge plug

An expandable plug used in a well's casing to isolate producing zones or to plug back to produce for a shallower formation, also to isolate a section of the bore hole to be filled with cement when a well is plugged.

Bridle

The cable sling between .'horsehead" and polished rod on a pumping well.

Bring in a well

To complete a well and put it in producing status.

British Thermal Unit (BTU)       

The quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of lib. of water through I degree Fahrenheit. 1000 BTU = 252 kcal

Broadcast ephemeris

Ephemeris transmitted by a satellite which describes its position and orbital parameters.

Broker

An agent employed (at a customary or an agreed rate of commission or remuneration) to buy or sell goods, merchandise, or marketable securities, or to negotiate insurances, freight rates, or other matters, for a principle; the sales or transactions being negotiated not in his name but in that of the principal.

Bubble cap

A covered hole in a tray of a fractionating column via which vapour bubbles travel upwards through the liquid in the tray.

Buck up

To tighten up a threaded connection (as two joints of drill pipe).

Bull plug

A short, closed pipe fitting used to plug the open end of a pipe or throat of a valve.

Bullet perforator

A tubular device that, when lowered to a selected depth within a well, fires bullets through the casing to provide holes through which the well fluids may enter.

Bumper sub

A slip-joint that is part of the string of drill pipe used in drilling from a drillship to absorb the vertical motion of the ship caused by wave action. The slip joint is inserted above the heavy drill collars in order to maintain the weight of the collars on the drill bit as the drill pipe above the slip joint moves up and down with motion of the ship.

Bumper sub (fishing)

A hydraulically actuated tool installed in the fishing string above the fishing tool to produce a jarring action. When the fishing tool has a firm hold on the lost drillpipe or tubing. which may also be stuck fast in the hole, the bumper sub imparts a jarring action to help free the fish.

Bundwall

Concrete or earth wall surrounding crude oil or refined product storage tanks. These are designed to hold the tank contents should the tank rupture or spring a major leak.

Bunker fuel

Residual fuel oil {i.e. Bunker C grade) or middle distillates used for bunkering ships.

Bunter

The lowest series of formations laid down during the Triassic Period of geological time; it includes sandstones that sometimes contain hydrocarbon traps.

Buoy (radio beacon)

A buoy equipped with a marker radio beacon.

Buoy (survey)

A buoy used by survey ships to control hydrographic surveys. See also buoy-control method.

Buoy-control method

A system of accurately located buoys on which three-point fixes could be observed. or to which distances could be measured by radio acoustic methods for extending hydrographic surveys beyond the visibility of shore control.

Burning pit

A sump made by excavation or of built-up earthworks in which oil or gas from a well during flow tests may be safely burnt.

Burning point

The lowest temperature at which a liquid in an open vessel will continue to burn when ignited by a flame. This temperature determines the degree of safety with which kerosene and other illuminates may be used.

Bury barge

A barge used to dig a trench for an underwater pipeline.

Butadiene

An unsaturated derivative of butane; one of the most important raw materials used in the manufacture of synthetic rubber.

Butadiene-styrene copolymer

A polymer manufactured from butadiene and styrene; an important raw material in the plastics and rubber industries.

Butane

The saturated hydrocarbon {alkane) with four carbon atoms in its molecule {C4H 10); the fourth member of the paraffin series; a gas at atmospheric pressure and normal temperature, but easily liquefied by pressure for transportation and subsequent use.

Butterfly valve

A type of quick-opening valve whose orifice is opened and closed by a disc that pivots on a shaft in the throat of the valve.

Buy-back price

The purchase price that an oil company pays to a State for oil that the company produces but which belongs to the State.

By-pass

A pipe connected around a valve or other control mechanism in a flow line in order to maintain flow during adjustments or repair.

By-pass valve

A valve by which the flow of liquid or gas in a system may be shunted past a part of the system through which it normally flows; a valve that controls an alternate route for liquid or gas.

By-product

A substance obtained incidentally during the manufacture or production of some other substance

 

 

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