petroleum engineering

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petroleum engineering, the branch of engineering that focuses on processes that allow the development and exploitation of crude oil and natural gas fields as well as the technical analysis, computer modeling, and forecasting of their future production performance. Petroleum engineering evolved from mining engineering and geology, and it remains closely linked to geoscience, which helps engineers understand the geological structures and conditions favorable for petroleum deposits. The petroleum engineer, whose aim is to extract gaseous and liquid hydrocarbon products from the earth, is concerned with drilling, producing, processing, and transporting these products and handling all the related economic and regulatory considerations.

History

The foundations of petroleum engineering were established during the 1890s in California. There geologists were employed to correlate oil-producing zones and water zones from well to well to prevent extraneous water from entering oil-producing zones. From this came the recognition of the potential for applying technology to oil field development. The American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers (AIME) established a Technical Committee on Petroleum in 1914. In 1957 the name of the AIME was changed to the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers.

Early 20th century

Courses covering petroleum-related topics were introduced as early as 1898 with the renaming of Stanford University’s Department of Geology to the Department of Geology and Mining; petroleum studies were added in 1914. In 1910 the University of Pittsburgh offered courses in oil and gas law and industry practices; in 1915 the university granted the first degree in petroleum engineering. Also in 1910 the University of California at Berkeley offered its first courses in petroleum engineering, and in 1915 it established a four-year curriculum in petroleum engineering. After these pioneering efforts, professional programs spread throughout the United States and other countries.

From 1900 to 1920, petroleum engineering focused on drilling problems, such as establishing casing points for water shutoff, designing casing strings, and improving the mechanical operations in drilling and well pumping. In the 1920s, petroleum engineers sought means to improve drilling practices and to improve well design by use of proper tubing sizes, chokes, and packers. They designed new forms of artificial lift, primarily rod pumping and gas lift, and studied the ways in which methods of production affected gas–oil ratios and rates of production. The technology of drilling fluids was advanced, and directional drilling became a common practice. During the 1910s and 1920s several collections of papers were published on producing oil. The first dedicated petroleum engineering textbook was A Textbook of Petroleum Production Engineering (1924) by American engineer and educator Lester C. Uren.

The worldwide economic downturn that began in late 1929 coincided with abundant petroleum discoveries and the startup of the oil field service industry (an industry developed to assist petroleum-producing companies in exploration, surveying, equipment design and manufacturing, and similar services). By 1929 German geophysicists Conrad and Marcel Schlumberger had firmly established the business of wireline logging (the practice of lowering measuring instruments into the borehole to assess various properties of the rock or fluids found within them). With this technology they were able to obtain subsurface electrical measurements of rock formations from many parts of the world—including the United States, Argentina, Venezuela, the Soviet Union, India, and Japan. With logging tools and the discovery of the supergiant oil fields (oil fields capable of producing 5 billion to 50 billion barrels), such as the East Texas Oil Field, petroleum engineering focused on the entire oil–water–gas reservoir system rather than on the individual well. Studying the optimum spacing of wells in an entire field led to the concept of reservoir engineering. During this period the mechanics of drilling and production were not neglected. Drilling penetration rates increased approximately 100 percent from 1932 to 1937.

The rapid expansion of the industry during the 1930s revealed the dangers of not monitoring the use of petroleum. In March 1937 a school in New London, Texas, within the East Texas Oil Field, exploded, killing about 300 students and teachers. The cause of the blast was a spark that ignited leaking natural gas from a line from the field’s waste gas to the school that had been connected by a janitor, a welder, and two bus drivers. In the aftermath of this tragedy, the Texas legislature made it illegal for anyone other than a registered engineer to perform petroleum engineering. This precedent was duplicated in many petroleum-producing countries around the world within the year. In addition to requiring registration of engineers, the Texas legislature also mandated that malodorant additives be added to natural gas, which prior to the explosion was transported odourless, in its natural state.

Petrophysics has been a key element in the evolution of petroleum engineering since the 1920s. It is the study and analysis of the physical properties of rock and the behaviour of fluids within them from data obtained through the wireline logs. It quickly followed the advent of wireline logging in the late 1920s, and by 1940 the subdiscipline had developed to a state where estimates could be made of oil and water saturations in the reservoir rocks.

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