Gulf Professional Publishing, an imprint of Elsevier,
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2017.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
1 online resource
GENERAL NOTES
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Includes index.
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
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Front Cover; Practical Onshore Gas Field Engineering; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; 0. Introduction; 0.1 Background; 0.2 Fluid Terminology; 0.3 Oilfield Units; 0.3.1 Unit Conversions; 0.3.2 gc; 0.4 Reservoir Fluids; 0.5 Liquids; 0.5.1 Liquid Specific Gravity; 0.5.2 API Gravity; 0.5.3 Barrel of Oil; 0.5.4 Liquid Hydrostatic Pressure; 0.5.5 Hydrostatic Gradient; 0.5.6 Liquid Compressibility; 0.6 Gas; 0.6.1 Gas Equation of State; 0.6.2 Gas Specific Gravity; 0.6.3 Gas Compressibility; 0.6.4 Gas Gradient; 0.6.5 Gas Density and Atmospheric Pressure; 0.6.6 Fluid Characteristics
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0.6.6.1 Selected Properties0.6.6.2 Adiabatic Constant; 0.6.6.3 Gas Mixtures; 0.6.6.4 Including Water Vapor; 0.6.6.5 Inherent Energy; 0.6.6.6 Energy Equivalents; 0.6.6.7 C6 Plus; 0.6.6.8 Examples of Gas Types; 0.7 Topics in Fluid Mechanics; 0.7.1 Statics; 0.7.1.1 Buoyancy; 0.7.2 Dynamics; 0.7.2.1 Navier-Stokes Equation; 0.7.2.2 Bernoulli Equation; 0.7.2.3 No-Flow Boundary; 0.7.2.4 Similitude; 0.7.3 Pressure and Temperature Measurement; 0.7.4 Total Pressure; 0.7.5 Pressure Continuum; 0.8 Standard Conditions; 0.9 Empirical Equations; References; Nomenclature; Units; Exercises; 1. Gas Reservoirs
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1.1 Source of Hydrocarbons1.1.1 Recoverable hydrocarbons explained; 1.1.2 Biotic hydrocarbons; 1.1.3 Abiotic hydrocarbons; 1.1.4 Do abiotic hydrocarbons matter to the oil & gas industry?; 1.2 Reservoir Rocks; 1.2.1 Porosity; 1.2.2 Permeability; 1.2.3 Hydrocarbon traps; 1.2.3.1 Anticline; 1.2.3.2 Fault; 1.2.3.3 Salt Dome; 1.3 Reservoir Concepts; 1.3.1 Reservoir temperature; 1.3.2 Reservoir pressure; 1.3.3 Original gas in place; 1.3.4 Reservoir pressure versus gas in place overview; 1.4 Primary Gas-Field Distinctions; 1.5 Conventional Gas Fields
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1.5.1 Reservoir pressure versus OGIP conventional1.5.2 Conventional gas; 1.5.3 Conventional reservoir materials; 1.6 Unconventional Fields; 1.6.1 Tight gas; 1.6.2 Coalbed methane; 1.6.3 Shale; 1.7 Reservoir Development; 1.7.1 Types of resources; 1.8 Conclusion; References; Further Reading; Nomenclature; Exercises; 2. Well-Bore Construction (Drilling and Completions); 2.1 Drilling Environments; 2.1.1 Onshore; 2.1.2 Offshore; 2.1.2.1 Fixed platform; 2.1.2.2 Jack-up rigs; 2.1.2.3 Semi-submersible rigs; 2.1.2.4 Drillships; 2.2 Rig Components; 2.2.1 Power systems; 2.2.2 Lifting Systems
'Practical Onshore Gas Field Engineering' delivers the necessary framework to help engineers understand the needs of the reservoir, including sections on early transmission and during the life of the well. Written from a reservoir perspective, this reference includes methods and equipment from gas reservoirs, covering the gathering stage at the gas facility for transportation and processing. Loaded with real-world case studies and examples, it offers a variety of different types of gas fields that demonstrate how surface systems can work through each scenario.