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A blowout preventer (BOP) is a large valve that encases an oil well at surface. During drilling, the valve may be closed if overpressure from an oil reservoir causes formation fluids such as oil and natural gas to back up within the wellbore and threaten the rig. By closing this valve (usually operated remotely via hydraulic actuators), the drilling crew can prevent explosive pressure release, thus regaining control of the reservoir pressure. Once this is accomplished, often the drilling mud density within the hole can be increased until enough fluid pressure is being placed on the reservoir, and the BOP can be opened for drilling to resume. The invention and use of BOPs resulted in the end of oil gushers, which were dangerous and costly. An oil well is a term for any perforation through the Earths surface designed to find and release both petroleum oil and gas hydrocarbons. ...
Overpressure, in geology, is a term used to describe the pressure regime in a stratigraphic unit that exhibits higher-than-hydrostatic pressure in its pore structure. ...
An oil reservoir, petroleum system or petroleum reservoir is often thought of as being an underground lake of oil, but it is actually composed of hydrocarbons contained in porous rock formations. ...
Natural olive oil Synthetic motor oil Oil, in a general sense, is a [[great thing it produces cheese ]] that is not miscible with water, and is in a liquid state at ambient temperatures. ...
Natural gas is a gaseous fossil fuel consisting primarily of methane. ...
A wellbore is usually an oil field term referring to the hole produced when drilling an oil or gas well. ...
This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
Drilling mud, also called drilling fluid, is a lubricant used while drilling oil and natural gas wells. ...
The Lucas Gusher at Spindletop, Texas (1901). ...
Use
BOPs come in a variety of styles, sizes and pressure ratings. Some are designed to close over an open wellbore, some seal around tubular components in the well (drillpipe, casing or tubing), and others are fitted with hardened steel shearing surfaces that can actually cut through drillpipe. Since BOPs are critically important to the safety of the crew, the drilling rig, and the wellbore itself, BOPs are inspected, tested and refurbished at regular intervals. BOP tests vary from daily function testing on critical wells to monthly or less frequent testing on wells thought to have low probability of well control problems.[1] A drilling rig is a structure housing equipment used to drill for water, oil, natural gas from underground reservoirs or to obtain mineral core samples. ...
Types Blowout preventers come in two varieties -- ram and annular. A ram blowout preventer utilizes two horizontally opposed hydraulic rams that either close around the drill string or shear through the drill string. It was invented by James Smither Abercrombie and Harry S. Cameron in 1922, and was first brought to market in 1924.[2] In petroleum drilling technology, a drill string in an oil rig is the column, or string, of drill pipe with attached tool joints that transmits fluid and rotational power from the kelly or top drive to the drill collars and bit. ...
1922 (MCMXXII) was a common year starting on Sunday (see link for calendar). ...
1924 (MCMXXIV) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link will take you to calendar). ...
An annular blowout preventer (also known as a spherical blowout preventer) utilizes a hemispherical piece of rubber reinforced with steel. Unlike a ram BOP which closes with a sharp horizontal motion, an annular BOP closes around the drill string in a smooth simultaneous upward and inward motion. The geometry of this movement reduces internal stresses and friction between the BOP body and the sealing element, which translates into a longer field life with less maintenance. The annular design also operates with a much lower operating pressure, reducing the number of hydraulic accumulators necessary, thereby reducing cost and complexity. It was invented by Granville Sloan Knox in 1946; a U.S. patent for it was awarded in 1952.[3][4] 1946 (MCMXLVI) was a common year starting on Tuesday. ...
1952 (MCMLII) was a Leap year starting on Tuesday (link will take you to calendar). ...
Both types are usually used together, in oil well christmas trees. In petroleum and natural gas extraction, a christmas tree is an assembly of valves, spools and fittings for an oil well, named for its resemblance to a decorated tree. ...
Images Two sets of BOP's, Gas well in Northern Italy | References - ^ Schlumberger Oilfield Glossary, accessed 21 May 2006
- ^ American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Engineering Landmarks Series
- ^ Ocean Star Offshore Energy Center
- ^ U.S. Patent Office, Patent #2,609,836
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