| A
Accumulation: Quantity of hydrocarbons (oil
and natural gas) found in the reservoir rock in an oil
or gas field.
Alkylation: A chemical reaction that consists
in fixing an alkyl radical onto a molecule.
Appraisal well: A well drilled in order to evaluate
the characteristics of a field.
Assisted recovery: Set of techniques for increasing
the productivity of a field.
Associated gas: Gases present in the reservoir
rock.
B
Ballast tank: A tank intended to be filled with
seawater to keep floating equipment stable.
Barrel: Unit of volume of crude oil in use in
the oil industry, especially in the USA and the UK.
Dates back to the days of sailing ships, when oil was
shipped in casks.
Bit: Tool used in drilling to break up rock mechanically
in order to penetrate the subsoil gradually. The bit
will dig a circular hole.
Blowout preventer : Safety system that quickly
closes a well in the course of drilling, to avoid accidental
blowouts.
C
Casing: Set of steel tubular elements used to
line the inner wall of a drill hole, to consolidate
it. The casing is secured by cementing the annular space
between the hole wall and the casing. Each time a tubing
is installed, the well diameter is reduced, so that
the tubing in a well forms a telescopic assembly. The
tubes have a standard length of nine meters, and are
assembled by threaded sleeves.
Catalysts: Chemical compounds that facilitate
or promote a reaction by their presence or action.
Catalytic cracking: This conversion operation
takes place at very high temperatures (500 degrees Celcius)
in the presence of a catalyst. It serves to break up
large hydrocarbon molecules into smaller ones.
Cat feed: Those products of the crude distillation
process which are further refined through catalytic
cracking.
Cementing: Injection of cement into the annulus
(space) between the casing and the well wall to consolidate
the latter and reduced water influxes.
Christmas tree: Another name for a wellhead.
Coke: A solid material similar to coal that can
be produced from processing of heavy oil.
Coking: A refining process by which the denser,
heavier products of the distillation process (residuals)
are converted to lighter products such as cat feed and
naphtha, and petroleum coke, a solid, coal-like fuel.
The coking unit, or coker, heats hydrocarbons to near
800 degrees Fahrenheit, at which temperature all the
lighter products vaporize and the coke solidifies in
a large drum called a coke drum from which it is removed
by means of high-pressure jets of water.
Completion (well): All operations (tubing, installation
of valves, wellhead, etc.) to bring a production well
into operation.
Conversion: This stage in the refining process
consists of breaking up the large molecules into smaller
ones in order to produce lighter compounds. Processes
involved include catalytic cracking and viscosity reduction
(visbreaking).
Cooling tower: A structure which cools heated
refining process water by circulating the water through
a series of louvers and baffles through which cool air
is forced by large fans.
Core-sampling (or coring): During drilling, cylindrical
samples of rock known as "core samples" are
removed in order to study the characteristics of the
terrain.
Crude oil: A mixture of thousands of chemicals
and compounds, primarily hydrocarbons. Crude oil must
be broken down into its various components by distillation
before these chemicals and compounds can be used as
fuels or converted to more valuable products. Crude
oil is classified as either sweet crude (sulfur content
less than 0.5%) or sour crude, (at least 2.5% sulfur).
Crude unit: The refinery processing unit where
initial crude oil distillation takes place. See topping.
Cut: One or more crude oil compounds which vaporize
and are extracted within a certain temperature range
during the crude distillation process. See distillation
curve.
D
Derrick: Metal tower erected vertically above
a well for the purpose of lifting and lowering tubes
and tools into the well.
Derrick-man: Member of the drilling crew who
works at the top of the derrick.
Desalting: Removal of salt from crude oil. Desalting
is preferably performed prior to commercialization of
the crude, and must be performed prior to refining.
Development: All operations and measures undertaken
to bring a reservoir into production.
Diamond-tipped (tools): Drill-bit or other tool
whose cutting-edge has been hardened with manmade diamonds.
Directional drilling: The most common drilling
direction is vertical, but there may be various reasons
for drilling obliquely.
Distillation: The first step in the refining
process. During distillation, crude oil is heated in
the base of a distillation tower. As the temperature
increases, the crude's various compounds vaporize in
succession at their various boiling points, then rise
to prescribed levels within the tower according to their
densities, condense in distillation trays, and are drawn
off individually for further refining. Distillation
is also used at other points in the refining process
to remove impurities.
Distillation curve: A graph which plots the percentage
(by volume) of a given grade of crude which boils off
as a function of temperature. Since the boiling points
of the various crude cuts are constant, the distillation
curve shows the percentage of each compound in a given
grade or batch of crude.
Distillation tower: A tall column-like vessel
in which crude oil is heated and its vaporized components
distilled by means of distillation trays. Also used
to remove impurities added during the refining process.
Drill: Making a hole by means of whatever mechanism.
Drill string: Set of drilling tools, comprising
pipes connected to each other, the bit, and the different
tools. In drilling, the drill string is rotated by the
rotary table.
Drilling mud: Mixture of water and special additives
circulating within the well for the purpose of cooling
the drill-bit, removing rock cuttings and transporting
them back up to the surface, preventing the well wall
from caving in, maintaining sufficient pressure at the
well bottom to avoid hydrocarbon blowout.
Drum cycle: In the petroleum coking process,
the length of time it takes to heat the coke drum sufficiently
to safely introduce hot hydrocarbons, transform the
raw material into solid petroleum coke, and remove or
cut the solid coke from the drum before repeating the
process. The shorter the drum cycle, the more economical
the coke manufacturing process.
E
Echosounder: Device used to calculate the distance
of an obstacle based on the time a soundwave takes to
travel to the obstacle and back.
Effluent: Mixture of oil, gas, water and sand
discharged from a well.
Electron: An elementary particle carrying a negative
electric charge. An electron's mass is negligible compared
with that of protons and neutrons.
Enhanced recovery: Recovery techniques designed
to extract more hydrocarbons from a reservoir by physical,
chemical or thermal means.
Exchanger (Heat exchanger): Any device used to
transfer heat from one process liquid to another. In
one kind of exchanger, process hydrocarbons are circulated
through tubes surrounded by cooling air or water.
Exploration: Any method used to discover new
oil and gas fields.
Exploration well: Well drilled to find an oil
field.
F
Field: Set of porous rocks containing hydrocarbons.
Flare bleeder: Device for evacuating and burning
unused gases.
Fractionation: The separation of crude oil into
its more valuable and usable components through distillation.
G
Gas cap: Upper portion of reservoir rock of
a gas-containing field. The gas extracted during oil
production is sometimes injected into the gas cap in
order to boost hydrocarbon recovery.
Geophone: Acoustical sensor for collecting reflected
waves, in seismic exploration.
Gravity: a property of a material that compares
its weight to its volume.
H
Heat exchanger: See exchanger
Horizontal drilling: Extreme form of directional
drilling, in which the hole is drilled along a horizontal
stratum.
Hydrocarbon: Chemical compound formed only of
carbon and hydrogen.
Hydrophone: Acoustical sensor used for collecting
reflected waves in seismic exploration at sea.
I
Injection well: Well used to inject water or
gas, in order to maintain a field at pressure or bring
it back under pressure.
J
Jacket: Steel structure placed on the seabed
with a deck supporting drilling and/or production facilities.
Jet fuel: A fuel used in aircraft. Jet fuel is
obtained by distillation and sweetening. The latter
removes all trace of mercaptans (very light molecules
containing sulfur atoms). Jet fuel is a white product,
so-called because it is transparent.
K
Kick-off (deflected) well: Well whose orientation
and inclination are determined to reach an area not
directly below the well.
L
Loading flange: Installations required to deliver
crude oil to a refinery.
Lubes (Lubricants): Denser, more viscous refined
products such as motor oil, bearing grease or machine
oil.
M
Manifold: Set of pipes and valves directing
the effluent or production into facilities.
Mantle: Impermeable stratum overlaying a reservoir
which prevents the hydrocarbons contained in it from
migrating to other rocks.
Mantle : The part of the earth between the crust
and the central core.
Mercaptan: Molecules containing sulfur, with
a low molecular weight and therefore very light.
Mother (or source) rock: Rock in which hydrocarbons
are formed.
MTBE: Methyl tertiary butyl ethane is a gasoline
additive which increases octane rating.
MTBF: Mean time between failures is the average
service life of a piece of process equipment, particularly
for rotating equipment. A refinery's MTBF is one indicator
of the effectiveness of its maintenance program.
N
Naphta: An oil distillate. Naphta is an intermediate
product between gasoline and kerosene. It is known as
a light product because of the low molecular weight
of the hydrocarbons making it up.
O
Octane number: In a gasoline-powered engine,
combustion is triggered by a sparkplug. Given the high
pressure and temperatures prevailing inside the combustion
chamber, it is vital to prevent the fuel from igniting
spontaneously. The octane number measures a fuel's resistance
to spontaneous ignition. The higher the octane number,
the greater fuel's resistance to spontaneous ignition.
Offshore: Designates oil fields and facilities
constructed at sea.
Oil-bearing reservoir: Continuous volume of rock
containing voids, pores, or a network of cracks, and
in which fluids (hydrocarbons, water, and inert gases)
can circulate.
P
Petrochemicals: Chemicals produced from petroleum.
They are often manufactured as part of the refining
process.
Petroleum: From the Latin petra oleum, meaning
"stone oil", an inflammable oily liquid varying
in color from yellow to black, consisting of widely
varying hydrocarbons, found in sedimentary strata of
the earth's crust.
Platform: Set of facilities rising above the
sea, used to operate offshore fields.
Porosity: Ratio of the volume of interstices
of a material to the volume of its mass. In oil fields,
the oil and gas are contained in pores in the rock.
Production sharing agreement: Contract by which
the production of a field is shared between the host
government and the oil company operating the field.
The company is paid in the form of cost oil, to cover
the exploration and development expenses borne by it
alone, and profit oil, which represents its profit on
the venture.
Production well: Well used when producing oil.
Prospect: Underground area in which geologists
think there is a chance of finding oil.
R
Reboiler: A special kind of heat exchanger used
to put heat into a distillation column.
Refinery: Plant where crude oil is separated
and transformed into marketable products.
Reforming: A refining process wherein short-chain
molecules in certain crude distillation products are
chemically recombined (reformed) by means of heat, pressure,
and usually, catalytic reaction to form higher-value
long-chain-molecule compounds.
Reserves (of a field): Volume of oil trapped
in a rock.
Reservoir characteristics: All of the features
that serve to characterize the hydrocarbons (viscosity,
density, etc.) and the rock containing them (porosity,
permeability, etc.).
Rotary: Drilling method consisting of drilling
rocks with bits turning about their axis. The rocky
debris is continuously evacuated to the surface by a
flow of mud under pressure.
Rotary table: Circular plate in a drilling rig
that transmits the rotational motion to the drill pipes
through the drive pipe.
S
Sample: Small quantity of rock removed, often
by coring, for analysis.
Sediments: Deposits of particles of variable
sizes, coming either from the erosion of old rocks or
from activities (shellfish shells or other). With time,
the sediments become sedimentary rock.
Sedimentary basin: Terrain consisting of superposed
layers of rock formed from the deposition of sediment
over vast tracts of ocean or lake beds, over the course
of geological eras.
Sedimentary rock: Rock made up of aggregated
sediments.
Seismic analysis: The seismic principle is to
generate elastic waves methodically and study their
propagation through the subsoil. The seismic waves are
refracted and reflected as they travel through the various
rock strata, and are detected at the ground or sea surface
by appropriately placed geophones. The seismic records
are interpreted to generate information concerning the
shape of the underground strata in the explored region.
Self-raising platform: An offshore drilling platform
fitted with large buoyancy tanks which are filled with
seawater to keep the rig stable in the sea swell.
Separation: The first stage in refining, consisting
in separating the different hydrocarbons present in
the crude oil depending on their respective boiling
ranges. This process takes place in a distillation column.
Separator: Apparatus that separates oil, gases,
and water contained in the effluent at the exit from
a production well, by making use of their relative densities.
Slot: Element of a drill shirttail for guiding the drill
tube.
Sounding well: Hole for obtaining data concerning
the characteristics of a field.
Sour crude: Crude oil containing a substantial
amount of sulfur.
Strata: Layers of rock making up a terrain.
Stratum of a terrain: Mineral deposits in superposed
layers.
Stripping: A separation process that consists
in injecting water steam into the distillation residue
in order to recover the lightest molecules.
Subsoil: Part of the earth's crust located below
the surface.
T
TAME: Tertiary amyl methyl ethane is a gasoline
additive which increases octane rating.
Topping (Atmospheric distillation): The initial
transformation of the crude oil at a refinery. The topper
heats crude oil at atmospheric pressure to accomplish
the first rough distillation cut. The lighter products
produced in this process are further refined in the
catalytic cracking unit or the reforming unit. Heavier
products which cannot be vaporized and separated in
this process are distilled still further in the vacuum
distillation unit or the coker.
Tray: Flat, perforated shelves at prescribed
levels in a distillation tower, which allow specific
vaporized crude oil components to pass through and then
condense on their surfaces (after contacting domes called
bubble caps above the perforations) before being drawn
off for further distillation.
Treatment: Set of procedures for separating the
various components of the effluent and obtaining crude
oil.
Tubing: Set of steel tubular elements in the
center of the well, by which the effluent is evacuated
to the surface.
Turnaround: Scheduled large-scale maintenance
activity wherein an entire process unit is taken offstream
for an extended period for comprehensive revamp and
renewal.
V
Vacuum distillation:Process by which heavier
cuts of crude not vaporized in the topping process are
heated in a vacuum to accomplish their fractionation.
Vent: Gas safety exhausting system to avoid dangerous
excess pressures building up.
Visbreaking: This is a thermal cracking process.
Like catalytic cracking, it breaks up large molecules
into smaller ones. It is applied to the residue of vacuum
distillation as part of the overall conversion process.
Viscosity: The ability of a liquid to flow at
a given temperature.
Volatility: The ability of a liquid to evaporate.
W
Well: Hole drilled underground for oil exploration
and operation. By extension, any apparatus used for
this purpose.
Wellhead: All connections, valves, nozzles, pressure
gages, thermometers, and so forth, installed at the
exit from a production well.
Well-logging: Electrical recording of physical
characteristics of rocks traversed by a well.
White product: A term used to refer the lightest
products resulting from the refining process, because
of their transparent appearance.
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