Aeronautical and Aerospace Engineering

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The Cutting Edge Technology of the Next Generation

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Civil Construction And Engineering

Civil engineering is a concept that deals with the design, construction and maintenance of the physical and naturally built environment. The act of civil construction and engineering includes bridges, roads, canals, airports, dams and buildings. These are merely just a few examples of what civil construction and engineering is about.

Civil engineering is one of the oldest engineering disciplines after military engineering. It has been an aspect of life since the beginning of human existence. Until modern times there was no clear distinction between civil engineering and architecture.

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Submersible pump

Working principle

ESP systems are effective for pumping produced fluids to surface.

A system of mechanical seals are used to prevent the fluid being pumped from entering the motor and causing a short circuit. The pump can either be connected to a pipe, flexible hose or lowered down guide rails or wires so that the pump sits on a “ducks foot” coupling, thereby connecting it to the delivery pipework.

Applications

Submersible pumps are found in many applications. Single stage pumps are used for drainage, sewage pumping, general industrial pumping and slurry pumping. They are also popular with aquarium filters. Multiple stage submersible pumps are typically lowered down a borehole and used for water abstraction or in water wells.

Special attention to the type of ESP is required when using certain types of liquids. ESP’s commonly used on board naval vessels cannot be used to dewater contaminated flooded spaces. These use a 440 volt A/C motor that operates a small centrifugal pump. It can also be used out of the water, taking suction with a 2-1/2 inch non-collapsible hose. The pumped liquid is circulated around the motor for cooling purposes. There is a possibility that the gasoline will leak into the pump causing a fire or destroying the pump, so hot water and flammable liquids should be avoided.

ESP usage in oil wells

Submersible pumps are used in oil production to provide a relatively efficient form of “artificial lift”, able to operate across a broad range of flow rates and depths. By decreasing the pressure at the bottom of the well (by lowering bottomhole flowing pressure, or increasing drawdown), significantly more oil can be produced from the well when compared with natural production.[citation needed] The pumps are typically electrically powered and referred to as Electrical Submersible Pumps (ESP).[citation needed]

ESP systems consist of both surface components (housed in the production facility, for example an oil platform) and sub-surface components (found in the well hole). Surface components include the motor controller (often a variable speed controller), surface cables and transformers. Subsurface components typically include the pump, motor, seal and cables. A gas separator is sometimes installed.

The pump itself is a multi-stage unit with the number of stages being determined by the operating requirements. Each stage consists of a driven impeller and a diffuser which directs flow to the next stage of the pump. Pumps come in diameters from 90mm (3.5 inches) to 254mm (10 inches) and vary between 1 metre (3 ft) and 8.7 metres (29 ft) in length. The motor used to drive the pump is typically a three phase, squirrel cage induction motor, with a nameplate power rating in the range 7.5 kW to 560 kW (at 60 Hz).

New varieties of ESP can include a water/oil separator which permits the water to be reinjected into the reservoir without the need to lift it to the surface. Major brands are Schlumberger’s Reda, Woodgroup’s ESP, Weatherford BORETS and Baker Hughes’ Centrilift. Until recently, ESPs had been highly costly to install due to the requirement of an electric cable downhole. This cable had to be wrapped around jointed tubing and connected at each joint. New coiled tubing umbilicals allow for both the piping and electric cable to deployed with a single conventional coiled tubing unit.

The ESP system consists of a number of components that turn a staged series of centrifugal pumps to increase the pressure of the well fluid and push it to the surface. The energy to turn the pump comes from a high-voltage (3 to 5 kV) alternating-current source to drive a special motor that can work at high temperatures of up to 300 F (149 C) and high pressures of up to 5,000 psi (34 MPa), from deep wells of up to 12,000 feet (3.7 km) deep with high energy requirements of up to about 1000 horsepower (750 kW). ESPs have dramatically lower efficiencies with significant fractions of gas, greater than about 10% volume at the pump intake. Given their high rotational speed of up to 4000 rpm (67 Hz) and tight clearances, they are not very tolerant of solids such as sand.

See also

Oil well

Centrifugal pump

Eductor-jet pump

Sewage pumping

References

^ a b c Lyons (ed), Standard Handbook of Petroleum & Natural Gas Engineering”, p. 662

^ Other forms of artificial lift include Gas Lift, Beam Pumping, Plunger Lift and Progressive cavity pump.

Lyons, William C., ed (1996). Standard Handbook of Petroleum & Natural Gas Engineering. 2 (6 ed.). Gulf Professional Publishing. ISBN 0884156435. 

External links

Water well pump article

ESP Artificial Lift Professional Community Knowledge Base

Submerged Pump system is employs is deferential strategies so well, combining two kind of pump in same machine

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Submersible pumps

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Petroleum industry

Exploration

Petroleum engineering (Reservoir simulation  Seismic to simulation)  Petroleum geology  Geophysics  Seismic (Seismic inversion)  Petrophysics  Core sampling

Drilling

Drilling engineering  Underbalanced drilling  Directional drilling  (Measurement while drilling  Geosteering)  Drilling fluid  Drill Stem Test

Development

Completion (Squeeze job)  Well logging  Pipeline transport  Tracers

Production

Artificial lift (Pumpjack  ESP  Gas lift)  EOR (Steam injection  Gas reinjection)  Water injection  Well intervention  Upstream  Midstream  Downstream  Refining

Technical challenges

Differential sticking  Drilling fluid invasion  Blowouts  Lost circulation

Oil and gas agreements

Production sharing agreements  Concessions  Service Agreements  Risk agreements

Data by country

Total energy (consumption per capita  intensity)  Natural gas (consumption  production  reserves  imports  exports)  Petroleum (consumption  production  reserves  imports  exports)

Supermajors

ExxonMobil  Royal Dutch Shell  BP  Chevron Corporation  ConocoPhillips  Total S.A. (See also: National oil companies)

Major oil provinces

North Sea  East Texas  Persian Gulf  Athabasca oil sands  Gulf of Mexico  Venezuela  Niger Delta  Russia

Related articles

OPEC  History of petroleum  Peak oil  Oil price increases since 2003  Price of petroleum  Society of Petroleum Engineers

Categories: Pumps | Irrigation | Oil wellsHidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from November 2009

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