Blog | Tools | Glossary | Search

Share:   |  feedback   |  Join us  

Petrofaq

From petrofaq
(Redirected from Main Page)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Wiki answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Petroleum Engineering.

Topics  |  Podcasts  |  All Categories  |  All Pages

Blog posts:

PVT and Flow course - Rate Equation (Darcy) Intro
Rate Equation (Darcy) Intro (20160308 Part 1) We are going to start by talking about Darcy's law. We're going to look at both for for liquid and gas. We'll use Darcy's law to derive what I'm going to call rate equations. Darcy's law gives you the velocity of a flow of fluid in a rock, we don't. . . more
voteIcon.gif1 votecomment.gif0 comments
Gaslift in simple words
Think about it as a force balance equation. Your well is at certain depth. Your reservoir has a certain pressure. Your produced fluid (oil, water, gas) has a certain density, often described as a fluid gradient using psi/ft of depth. If your reservoir pressure is greater than the pressure of the. . . more
voteIcon.gif1 votecomment.gif0 comments

PVT and Flow course - Black-Oil PVT

Black-Oil PVT (20160301 Part 1) Traditional black oil pvt is kind of what we talked about before, where you take the different Liberation tests data together with the multi-state separator test data, you could also include the constant composition expansion data above the bubble point to kind of. . . more
voteIcon.gif0 votescomment.gif0 comments
Collaborative articles on LinkedIn
Collaborative articles are a new way to tap in to the collective knowledge of the LinkedIn community so averyone can learn from experts across professional topics. Collaborative articles are knowledge topics published by LinkedIn with insights and perspectives added by the LinkedIn community.. . . more
voteIcon.gif1 votecomment.gif0 comments

PVT and Flow course - Lab PVT Tests CVD

Lab PVT Tests CVD (20160225 Part 1) The Constant Volume Depletion test. This test is mainly conducted on gas condensates, that's reservoir fluids with a dew point. And it can in a few cases be used for what we'll call very volatile or sometimes we refer to it as near critical oils - oils with. . . more
voteIcon.gif1 votecomment.gif0 comments

more posts...     RSS

Recent wiki pages:

more...

Recent changes:

more...


News & Events: