Stories tagged with "DIFFERENTIAL PRESSURE"
Permeability and Initial Oil Production
Posted by Heading Out on September 27, 2009 - 11:13am
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: d'arcy's law, differential pressure, oil well flow, porosity, tech talk [list all tags]
This is part of Heading Out's Sunday tech talk series.
We got oil! We have put together the drill, mounted it on the derrick, circulated mud and drilled a well and used casing to line it, and a Christmas Tree to control it, and we found a layer of rock with the right porosity, and it has oil in it. Hell-lo, Beverly Hills!
Ah, but hold on a moment gentle folk, aren't we forgetting that to get the oil out of the ground, it first has to get to the well. The basics of this aren't particularly complex, but within this topic of oil well production lies a scientific reason that production goes down in an oil field as the field gets older.
I'm going to begin by making a slight correction. Last time while I talked about sandstones and carbonates, I did not explain the second group very well. And because the structure of a carbonate field is often quite different from one that occurs in sandstone, I am going to put the more generic post on production from carbonates off another week. Save only to say that the carbonates are usually limestones (including chalks) and dolomite, and that because these are very fine grained rocks, but easier to dissolve, the oil is more often found in the joints and cracks and dissolved holes in these rocks, than it is evenly spread through the rock. In contrast, with sandstone, the oil is often in the pore spaces that are spread throughout the rock, and so let's assume for now that we've got oil within a sandstone layer.



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