Technical Thesaurus oil & gas

P

 

Packed columns

A distillation or absorption tower which is filled with small objects, called packing, to effect an intimate contact between rising vapours.

Packer

A mechanical device containing a rubber packing element which can be expanded against the well bore or casing to isolate the annular sections above and below the element.

Packer fluid

Any tough, pliable material -rubber or fibre -used to fill a chamber or "gland" around a moving rod or valve stem to prevent the escape of gas or liquid; any yielding material used to effect a pressure-tight joint. Packing is held in place and compressed against a moving part by a "follower", an adjustable element of the packing gland.

Palaeozoic era

The era of geological time (comprising the Cambrian, Ordovician, Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous and Permian Periods) which began roughly 600 million years ago and ended roughly 230 million years ago.

Paper barrels

Crude oil or products traded on the forward or similar markets which are closed out by subsequent sale or settlement without physical or 'wet' delivery.

Paraffin

A name given in the UK to the premium grade of kerosene burned in lamps and fueless space heaters; a member of the paraffin (alkane) series of hydrocarbons. A white, odourless. tasteless and chemically inert waxy substance derived from distilling petroleum.

Paraffins

The simplest homologous series of hydrocarbons containing no unsaturated carbon-to-carbon bonds; also known as the alkanes.

Paraxylene

An aromatic compound used in the manufacture of polyester fibres.

Party chief

The industry expression for the manager of a survey team.

Pay sand

The producing formation, often one that is not even sandstone. It is also called pay zone, and production zone.

Pay zone

The stratum of rock in which oil and/or gas is found.

PDVSA

Petroleos de Venezuela S.A.

PEMEX

Petroleos Mexicana

Pentane

The saturated hydrocarbon (alkane) with five carbon atoms in its molecule (CSH 12); the fifth member of the paraffin series -a liquid under normal conditions.

Perforate

To pierce the casing wall and cement to provide holes through which formation fluids may enter, or to provide holes in the casing so that materials may be introduced into the annulus between the casing and the wall of the borehole. Perforating is accomplished by lowering into the well a perforating gun, or perforator, that fires electrically detonated bullets or shaped charges from the surface. See gun perforator.

Perforating gun

See gun perforator.

Permeability

A measure of the capacity of a rock or stratum to allow water or other fluids such as oil to pass through it.

Permian period

The period of geological time which began roughly 280 million years ago and ended roughly 230 million years ago.

Persuader

An oversize tool for a small job; an extension added to the handle of a wrench to increase the leverage.

Petrochemical

An intermediate chemical derived from petroleum, hydrocarbon liquids or natural gas, e.g. ethylene, propylene, benzene, toluene and xylene.

Petrol

See motor spirit.

Petroleum

A generic name for hydrocarbons including crude oil, natural gas liquids, natural gas and their products.

Petroleum engineer

The engineer who is responsible for the overall strategy of oil and gas drilling and production operations for a particular field.

Petrosulphur compounds

Hydrocarbon chemicals which include sulphur in their molecules, e.g. mercaptans.

pH

A measure of the acidity or alkalinity of a solution which is a function of the hydrogen-ion-concentration. The pH scale is a logarithmic scale and ranges from 0, which represents a strong acid, to 14, which represents a strong alkali. A neutral solution, which is neither acidic nor alkali, and pure water, has a pH value of 7.

Photovoltaic (Electricity from sun)

Photovoltaic technology allows for the direct tranformation of solar energy into electric energy. Photovoltaic systems have been installed all over the world giving more than 500 MWp power in order to provide locally generated energy to isolated users and communities and to produce power for the distribution grids. Interest in photovoltaics lies in the following characteristics: widespread availability of the solar source, total modularity (from a few watts up to megawatts), high level of reliability, low maintenance requirements. Solar energy can be converted into electricity not only by means of photovoltaic systems, but also using thermodynamic technology. By concentrating radiation with mirrors, high temperatures can be reached and steam can be generated to produce energy with traditional turbo-generators. All over the world there are a dozen plants giving a total installed power of 360 MW.

Photovoltaic peak power stations

Photovoltaic power stations are electric power stations which are highly modular (100-300 kWp modular units) and easy to integrate in Medium Voltage distribution networks. Entirely automated and remote controlled, they have very low maintenance costs and make it also possible to reinforce the weak points of the grid, improving reliability and quality of service during peak hours.

Photovoltaic rooftops

Photovoltaic systems integrated into residential and industrial constructions (photovoltaic rooftops) can range in size from a few kilowatts to hundreds of kilowatts, and are connected to the distribution electricity grid. They produce energy to satisfy local electricity power requirements and use the network as backing, by absorbing energy when it is lacking or supplying it in case of surplus. This application is characterised by the following features: production of energy close to the load, use of marginal surface areas, possibility of replacing conventional building elements with photovoltaic modules.

Pig

A piece of equipment that is inserted into a pipeline and is carried along by the flow of oil or gas; used to clean or monitor the internal condition of the pipeline or to mark an interface between two different products.

Piling

Steel piles driven into the sea-bed to anchor fixed steel structures such as production and drilling platforms.

Pilot

A small flame in the flare section to control the burning of gas. There are three pilots in each flare system, and they are alight continuously. The pilots will ignite gas that is sent through to be flared.

Pin

The male section of the tool joint. See tool joint.

Pin end

Externally threaded pipe end which screws into a box or female end.

Pinch-out trap

A trap where a bed or reservoir rock gets progressively thinner as it nears an impervious area and eventually disappears.

Ping

An acoustic pulse signal projected by an underwater transducer.

Pinger

A device which produces a short pulse of relatively low energy sound for acoustic work.

Pipe hook

A steel hook used in handling drill pipes.

Pipe laying barge

See lay barge.

Pipe rack

A structure on which sections of piping or casing may be stored.

Pipe ram

A sealing component for a blowout preventer that closes the annular space between the pipe and the blowout preventer or wellhead. See annular space and blowout preventer.

Pipe tongs

See tongs.

Pipeline

A pipe through which oil, its products, or gas is pumped between two points, either offshore or onshore.

Pit

An unroofed sump or tank for holding liquids such as drilling mud.

PIW

Petroleum Intelligence Weekly

Plant unit

A major piece of equipment within a plant section or possibly a plant train, e.g. sulfinol unit.

Plastic

A generic term for a range of high-molecular-weight polymers that can be used to produce artefacts.

Plastic resins

See engineering plastic resins.

Plastic viscosity

The plastic viscosity is a measure of the internal resistance to fluid flow attributable to the amount, type and size of solids present in a given fluid.

Plastomer

A molecule or combination of molecules that can form the basis of a polymer or plastic.

Plate column

A distillation column consisting of a number of equally spaced, perforated, horizontal plates which may be used in place of a packed column.

Plateau level

The level of peak production reached by an oil or gas field; it is always followed by declining levels of production.

Platform

An offshore structure from which development wells are drilled. See drilling platform, production platform.

Platform equipment

The equipment installed on a production or drilling platform (drilling equipment, processing equipment, power plant, accommodation modules, etc.).

Platform sample

A sample of hydrocarbon, water, corrosion, etc., collected on the production platform.

Plugging a well

When a well is abandoned for any reason, either temporarily or permanently, it must be sealed off to ensure that no escape of any kind can occur. This sealing off is generally accomplished by insertion of a plug of cement. Also called plugging.

Pneumatic control

The control and monitoring of automated or remote processing plant by means of compressed air.

Polished rod

A smooth brass or steel rod that works through the stuffing box or packing gland of a pumping well; it is the uppermost section of the string of sucker rods, attached to the walking beam of the pumping jack.

Polyacrylamides

A class of resins which swell when water is added to them.

Polyethylene (polythene)

A polymer formed by joining ethylene molecules together; one of the most important plastics.

Polymer

A complex compound formed by the polymerisation of one or more monomers.

Polymerisation

The process whereby simple units containing one or more molecules are joined together to form complex molecules.

Polyphenylene sulphide

An engineering plastic with excellent resistance to most chemicals.

Polypropylene

A polymer formed by joining propylene molecules together; an important plastic.

Pontoon

A hollow buoyancy tank used to support a semi-submersible rig, barge or other structure.

Porcupine

A cylindrical steel drum with steel bristles protruding from its surface; pipe-cleaning pig for swabbing a sediment laden pipeline.

Pore

An opening or space within a rock or mass of rocks, usually small and often filled with some fluid (as water, oil, gas, or all three). Compare vug.

Pore pressure

The natural internal pressure in a formation.

Porosity

A measure of the amount of free space or voids in a rock; generally expressed as a percentage of the total volume.

Positioning

Practise used to compute coordinate locations; a static process (i.e. instantaneous position fixing even in a moving craft). Methods include radio positioning (surface), acoustic positioning (underwater). There is unavoidable overlap between navigation and positioning, both of which use similar systems offshore (navigation uses radio positioning while positioning sensors uses ship's gyro).

Positive choke

A choke in which the orifice size must be changed to change the rate of flow through the choke. See choke and orifice.

Positive displacement pump

A pump that displaces or moves a measured volume of liquid on each stroke or revolution; a pump with no significant slippage; a piston, plunger or rotary pump.

Possible reserves

Undeveloped oil and/or gas reserves which best judgement indicates might eventually be recoverable from undrilled or untested structures.

Post completion

After setting the tubing string for the purpose of continuous production from a well.

Potable water

Water that is fit for human consumption (e.g. drinking).

Potential

The production possibility of a well.

Potential (optimum)

The rate at which the well can produce with the optimum completion equipment installed.

Potential (present)

The rate at which the well can produce with the present completion equipment installed.

Power tong

An air or hydraulically-powered mechanism for making up and breaking out joints of drill pipe, casing or tubing.

Precipitate

An insoluble substance formed in a solution by a chemical reaction; it sinks to the bottom of a vessel as a sediment.

Precision emphemeris

The emphemeris which describe the orbit of a navigational satellite precisely. They are of higher precision than the broadcast emphemeris but not available in real time

Preheater

A type of heat exchanger in which a cold liquid or gas being fed to a process is preheated utilising one of the hot liquids or gases leaving the process, or by steam.

Prepayment

The repayment to the bank of a specific amount of debt under a loan agreement before the scheduled time.

Pressure

The force of one body acting on another by weight or the application of power. Measured as force per unit area, e.g. pounds per square inch (psi).

Pressure drop

The decrease in pressure due to friction which occurs when a liquid or gas passes through a pipe, vessel or other piece of equipment.

Pressure equipment

Vessels, piping and other equipment specially designed to operate under pressure. Excessive pressure relief is provided by safety relief valves, or bursting discs.

Pressure gauges

Devices for the measurement of pressure.

Pressure gradient

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 psi/ft of vertical elevation (9.794 kPa/m). The normal pressure gradient in a well is equivalent to the pressure exerted at any given depth by a column of 10 per cent salt water extending from that depth to the surface (i.e., 0.465 psi/ft or 10.518 kPa/m).

Pressure relief valve

A valve that opens at a preset pressure to relieve excessive pressures within a vessel or line; also called a relief valve, safety valve, or pop valve.

Pressure surge

A sudden, usually short-duration increase in pressure. When pipe or casing is run into a hole too rapidly, and increase in the hydrostatic pressure results, which may be great enough to create lost circulation. Pressure surges can also occur when starting up pumps or compressors or when opening or closing valves.

Preventer

Shortened form of blowout preventer. See blowout preventer.

Primary cementing

The cementing operation that takes place immediately after the casing has been run into the hole; used to provide a protective sheath around the casing, to segregate the producing formation, and to prevent the migration of undesirable fluids. See secondary cementing and squeeze cementing.

Primary migration

Nearly all sedimentary rocks contain a small percentage of organic materials from which petroleum could be formed. As pressure from overlying layers compacts these 'source' rocks, the oil or gas droplets are squeezed out and joined together to form globules large enough to flow under pressure.

Primary recovery

Recovery of oil or gas from a reservoir purely by using the natural pressure in the reservoir to force the oil or gas out.

Prime mover

An internal-combustion engine that is the source of power for a drilling rig in oilwell drilling.

Priming

Reference a boiler, a violent, spasmodic action resulting in the throwing of slugs of water over with the steam; reference a pump, preliminary filling of the pump with liquid vapours, hence eliminating the tendency to become vapour locked.

Principal

The original sum borrowed on the basis of which interest is calculated. See loan capital, interest.

Probable reserves

Undeveloped oil and/or gas reserves considered to be recoverable from penetrated formations but lacking information to be classified as proven reserves.

Process engineering

That branch of engineering which deals with industrial processes, particularly the production of petrochemicals and their products.

Processing

In the context of survey, refers to navigation (producing charts), analogue work (conditioning raw signal), or digital work (producing sections from raw data, onboard or ashore).

Processing plant

Special plant installed on a production platform or at a pipeline terminal to separate gas, oil and water from a mixture containing some or all of these components. Also called treatment or separation plant.

Producing horizon

Rock from which oil or gas is produced.

Production

1. The phase of the petroleum industry that deals with bringing the well fluids to the surface and separating them and with storing, gauging, and otherwise preparing the product for the pipeline. 2. The amount of oil or gas produced in a given period.

Production drilling

Drilling of wells in order to bring a field into production.

Production licence

A licence to produce oil or gas in a particular area issued to a company by the governing State.

Production phase

The phase in the life of a field in which oil or gas is produced.

Production platform

A platform from which development wells are drilled and which carries all the associated processing plant and other equipment needed to maintain a field in production.

Production string

See production tubing.

Production test

A test conducted in a well to assess its production potential through measurements of pressures and fluid volumes produced during various specified time intervals.

Production trains

Series of separating and processing facilities on a platform and in a plant for a stream of hydrocarbons.

Production tubing

The pipe in a production well through which oil or gas flows from the reservoir to the surface. Also known as the production string.

Production well

A well used to remove oil or gas from a reservoir.

Profile

Analogue sub sea-bed record (metres to tens of metres penetration).

Project life

The length of time a project is estimated to last.

Projection (lambert conformal conic)

A conformal projection of the conical type on which all geographic meridians are represented by straight lines which meet in a common point outside the limits of the map, and the geographic parallels are represented by a series of arcs or circles having this common point for a centre. Meridians and parallels intersect at right angles, and angles on the Earth are correctly represented on the projection. This projection may have one or two standard parallels along which the scale is held exact.

Projection (mercator)

A conformal projection of the cylindrical type. The Equator is represented by a straight line true to scale; the geographic meridians are represented by a straight line perpendicular to the line representing the Equator; they are spaced according to their distance apart at the Equator. The geographic parallels are represented by a second system of straight lines perpendicular to the family of lines representing the meridians, and therefore parallel with the Equator. Conformality is achieved by mathematical analysis, the spacing of the parallels being increased with the increasing distance from the Equator to conform with the expanding scale along the parallels resulting from the meridians being represented by parallel lines. Since rhumb lines appear as straight lines and directions can be measured directly, this projection is widely used in navigation.

Propagation:

Transmission of signals from radio or sonic devices. Velocity of p -For radio waves, somewhere near the velocity of sound in air. P Factor - Factor to use on signal values due generally to minor variations in the transmission conditions at that time.

Propane

The saturated hydrocarbon (alkane) with three carbon atoms in its molecule (C3H8); the third member of the paraffin series -a gas under normal conditions.

Propene (propylene)

The member of the alkene series containing three carbon atoms, two of which are connected by a double (unsaturated) bond (C3H6); an important raw material in the chemical and plastics industries.

Proppant

See propping agent.

Propping agent

A granular substance (as sand grains, aluminium pellets, or other material) carried in suspension by the fracturing fluid that serves to keep the cracks open when the fracturing fluid is withdrawn after a fracture treatment.

Prospect

Geological structure that can be hydrocarbon bearing; interpreted from a number of techniques, one of the more important being mapping of seismic data.

Proven field

An oil and/or gas field whose physical extent and estimated reserves have been determined.

Proven reserves

Those reserves proved to a high degree of certainty by reason of actual depletion, successful testing or, in certain cases, adequate core analyses or quantitative log interpretation. They are defined really by reasonable geological interpretation of structures and known continuity of oil or gas saturated reservoir rock. If reliable correlations can be made between two wells then the intervening area may also be regarded as proven.

PSI

Abbreviation for pounds per square inch. See pressure.

Pull one green

To pull a drill bit from the hole before it is worn out; to pull a bit before it is necessary.

Pulling tubing

The operation of removing the tubing from a well.

Pump duplex

A double acting, two cylinder, constant displacement, reciprocating piston or plunger pump.

Pump pressure

Fluid pressure arising from the action of the pump.

Pump simplex

A one cylinder steam pump used in refineries and processing plants. Simplex pumps are simple, direct-acting pumps with the steam piston connected directly to the pump's fluid plunger.

Pump triplex

A single acting, three cylinder, constant displacement, reciprocating plunger pump.

Pumps

Mechanical devices to transport liquids or gases from one vessel to another along pipelines. There are a wide variety of pumps of three, general types: reciprocating, gear and centrifugal. The choice depends on the height to which the liquid is to be pumped (delivery head), quantity and nature of the liquid (viscosity, corrosive nature, etc.) and availability of prime movers (electric motors, turbines, etc.)

Purchases in place

Estimate of Security Exchange Commission (USA) reserves purchased in the ground from another party.

Purging

Cleansing of processing equipment, or pipelines. Vessels must be purged of noxious gases by sweeping them with air before removing man ways or entering them for cleaning or inspection. Pipelines must be purged of material, e.g. water, before they are placed into service to carry crude oil or natural gas.

 

 

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