Notes On Dimensions and Units
Notes On Dimensions and Units
Spring 2002
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Fluid Properties
1. Liquid Specific Gravity
liquid
liquid
water
2. API Gravity
141.5
° API liquid
131.5
4. Gas in Solution
Rs = standard cubic feet of gas liberated when one stock tank barrel of crude oil is
produced
B= . In other words:
RB
B=
STB
where: and are densities of the stock tank oil and reservoir liquid, both in
lbm/ft3, and 0.01357 converts the gas volume to mass.
The conversion factors is derived as follows:
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Example Fluid Properties Calculations
Definition
liquid
liquid
water
Calculation
liquid 48.6
liquid 0.779
water 62.4
2. API Gravity
Given
Specific gravity of liquid-1 0.779
Specific gravity of liquid-2 0.876
Specific gravity of liquid-3 1.000
Definition
141.5
° API liquid
131.5
Calculations
Specific Gravity API Gravity
0.779 50.0
0.876 30.0
1.000 10.0
3. Gas Gravity
Given Component Composition (Mole fraction)
Methane C1 0.850
Ethane C2 0.090
Propane C3 0.040
n-Butane n-C4 0.020
Definition
gas Mg M g(pure gas) M apparent( gas mixture)
gas
air M air 28.97 28.97
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3. Gas Gravity (continued)
Calculation
Component
Component Mole fraction Molar Mass Mass Mass fraction
j yj Mj y jM j y j M j / 19.26
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Fluid Properties Nomenclature
Lower Case Letters
n Amount, moles
nrc Amount at reservoir conditions, moles
nsc Amount at surface conditions, moles
p Pressure, FL-2
prc Pressure at reservoir conditions, FL-2 (psia)
psc Pressure at surface conditions, FL-2 (psia)
z Gas law deviation factor, actual volume/ideal volume
zrc Gas law deviation factor at reservoir conditions, actual volume/ideal volume
zsc Gas law deviation factor at surface conditions, actual volume/ideal volume (1.0)
Greek Letters
γl Liquid specific gravity, density of liquid at 60oF/density of water at 60oF
ρ Mass density, mass/volume
ρg Density, mass/volume (lbm/ft3)
ρl Liquid density, mass/volume (lbm/ft3)
ρo Oil density, mass/volume (lbm/ft3)
ρoR Oil density at reservoir conditions, mass/volume (lbm/ft3)
ρSTO Oil density at surface (stock tank) conditions, mass/volume (lbm/ft3)
ρw Water density, mass/volume (lbm/ft3)
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Dimension and Unit Systems
Dimensions are physical quantities and units are standards of measurement. Thus, dimensions
are independent of units.
Units are classified as base, supplementary, and derived. Units for supplementary dimensions
can also be considered as base units. Derived units are combinations of base units.
A dimension and unit system is a set of fundamental dimensions and base units necessary for a
particular field of science or engineering. It is called a coherent system if equations between
numerical values (units) have the same form as the corresponding equations between the
quantities (dimensions). For example, in the SI system, F = m·a is used to define the derived
dimension. Likewise, 1 newton = (1 kilogram)·(1 meter per second squared) is used to define
the derived unit. In other words, in a coherent system, combinations of any two unit quantities is
the unit of the resulting quantity. Coherency is a major advantage of the SI system.
In petroleum engineering, three dimension and unit systems are commonly used:
The purpose of these notes is to help you learn the above systems and how to convert units from
one system to another.
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The International System of Units (SI)
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The International System of Units (SI) (Cont'd)
atto 10-18 a
femto 10-15 f
pico 10-12 p
nano 10-9 n
micro 10-6
milli 10-3 m
centi 10-2 c
deci 10-1 d
deka 10+1 da
hecto 10+2 h
kilo 10+3 k
mega 10+6 M
giga 10+9 G
tera 10+12 T
peta 10+15 P
exa 10+18 E
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American Engineering System of Units (AES)
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Oilfield Units (related to AES System)
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Conversion of Units
In a coherent system of units such as SI, a derived dimension is a product or quotient of other
dimensions. For example, the dimension—force—is the product of mass and acceleration,
F = ma, and the unit of force—newton—is the product of the unit of mass and the unit of
acceleration. In the American Engineering System, force is expressed in lb f, mass in lbm, and
acceleration in ft/sec2. This system is obviously not coherent. Hence, a conversion factor other
ma lb m ft
than one must be used in the equation; that is, F = , where gc = 32.174 2 is a
gc sec lb f
constant, known as the gravitational conversion constant.
Derivation of gc
The principle of conservation of units is used to derive gc. Briefly stated, this principle is that to
convert a relationship (an equation) from a given system of units to another (a required) system
of units, the given units must be conserved. The technique is illustrated below.
We wish to convert F = ma from SI to AES. Here, SI is the given system and AES is the
required system.
First, find the dimension of the “hidden constant” in the given equation. In other words,
F
1= has dimension force divided by the product of mass and acceleration.
ma
Next, consider the units of the hidden constant—the given units are
2
Ns
2
lb f sec
and the required units are .
kg m lb m ft
Now, convert the given units of the hidden constant to the required units.
Thus,
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Review Problems abcdeabcde
1. A weir is a regular obstruction in an open flow
channel over which flow takes place such as that
shown in the sketch at right. It can be used to
measure open channel flow rates. For a rectangular
weir, the theoretical formula for the flow rate is
Q = 5.35LH1.5
-11 m m
F 6.672 x 10 1 2 2
r
where F = force of attraction between two bodies, N
m1 = mass of body one, kg
m2 = mass of body two, kg
r = distance between bodies, m
Determine a new constant so that the law can be applied with F in lb f, m1 & m2 in lbm, and r in
mi.
Answers
1. 2.95 m0.5/s
2. 10.732 psi· ft3/(lbm·mol· oR)
3. 1.192 x 10-18 lbf·mi2/lbm2
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Porosity, Permeability, and Saturation (-k-S)
Porosity is a measure of the fluid storage capacity of a rock,
Vp
Vb
where k = permeability, d
q = flow rate, cm3/s
= fluid viscosity, cp
L = length of flow path, cm
A = cross-sectional area of
flow path, cm2
p = pressure difference
across
flow path, atm
The dimension of permeability is [L2].
qL L3 P t L 1 1
Ap t 1 1 2 P
L
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Darcy’s Law
Darcy found that when water flows
vertically downward through sand, the
volume of water passing through the
system in unit time (the discharge q in
Fig. 2) is proportional to the drop in
head h across the sand. Considering
the cross sectional area A and thick-
ness of the sand l, these observations
can be written,
q dh
v K
A dl
The generalized two dimensional form of Darcy’s law (API Code 27) is
k dp g dz 6
vs x 10
ds 1.01325 ds
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The Darcy System of Units
In SI Units
In Oilfield Units
16
Converting Permeability Units
The principle of conservation of units is used. Briefly stated, this principle is that to convert a
relationship (an equation) from a given system of units to another (a required) system of units,
the given units must be conserved. The technique is illustrated below.
qL
We wish to convert k from Darcy units (d, cm, s, cp, atm) to Oilfield units (md, ft, bbl,
Ap
day, cp, psi). Here, Darcy units is the given system and Oilfield units is the required system.
First, find the dimension of the “hidden constant” in the given equation. In other words,
kAp
1= has dimension kAp divided by qL [1].
qL
Next, consider the units of the hidden constant—the given units are
d atm s md ft psi day
2 and the required units are .
cp cm cp bbl
Now, convert the given units of the hidden constant to the required units.
Thus,
=
cp cm d ft atm 86,400 s
2 2
ft
cp ft 3 bbl cp bbl
Summary of Darcy equations for horizontal, linear flow (including conversion factors):
Darcy Units SI Units Oilfield Units
qL qL qL
k k k 887.2
Ap Ap Ap
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Horizontal, Linear Flow
A
q q
x1 x2
q k dp
vx
A dx
EXAMPLE: A rock sample10 cm long and 2 cm2 in cross section is used for some steady-state
flow tests. Calculate the permeability of the rock if it is completely saturated with
an oil having a viscosity of 2.5 cp and oil is flowed through the rock at a rate of
0.0080 cm3/s under a 1.5 atm pressure drop?
k
qL
0.0080 cm 3 / s 2.5 cp 10 cm
0.067 d 67 md
Ap
2 cm 2 1.5 atm
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Wellbore Volumes
V r h d h
2 2
h
4
V r22 r12 h d 22 d12 h
4
EXAMPLE: Suppose you are the drilling engineer on a rig. You have set 7-5/8 inch OD,
33.7 lbm/ft casing (ID = 6.765 inches) from 0 to 5900 ft and have drilled out to
7900 ft. The average bore hole diameter from 5900 to 7900 ft is 6.25 inches.
Calculate the annular volume in ft 3 if 4-1/2 inch OD casing is installed.
V = 987 ft3
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Pressure Gradients
The basic equation of hydrostatics can be written
p = gh
where p = change in fluid pressure, Pa
= density, kg/m3
g = acceleration of gravity, m/s2
h = change in height of fluid, m
Pa kg m N 1 Pa
m m 3 s 2 m 2 m m
EXAMPLE: Calculate the pressure gradient for a fluid having a density of 65 lb m/ft3.
Assume g = 32 ft/s2.
p
g
65 32 0.449 or 0.45 psi / ft
h 144g c 144 32.174
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Horizontal, Radial Flow
ds = -dr
h
rw re
q q k dp
vr
A 2 rh dr
re dr 2kh p e
3 2kh p e p w 2khp
q dp q (cm / s)
rw r p
w
ln re r w
ln re r w
In oilfield units, the equation for liquid is
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Reservoir Volumes
h
rw re
Since porosity is the ratio of the pore volume to bulk volume, the pore volume is
2
Vp re h
And, since water saturation is the fraction of the pore volume filled with water, the hydrocarbon
pore volume is
Vhc re h 1 S w
2
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Homework Problems
1. A certain oilfield has an average producing gas-oil ratio of 350 scf/stb. The density of the stock
tank oil is 54.7 lbm/ft3 at 60 oF and the apparent molar mass of the associated gas is 21.7
lbm/lbmole. Determine the
a. API gravity of the stock tank oil.
b. Specific gravity of the associated gas.
c. Density of the reservoir oil if the oil formation volume factor is 1.2 rb/stb and the gas in
solution is equal to the average producing gas-oil ratio.
d. Type of reservoir fluid.
2. The equation of state for a particular substance at low pressures can be written
p = 53.55T,
where p = pressure, lbf/ft2
= density, lbm/ft3
T = absolute temperature, oR
a. Determine a new constant so the equation can be used with p in Pa, in kg/m3, and T in K.
b. Use the ideal gas law (pV = nRT), the definition of quantity (mass/molar mass), and the
definition of density (mass/volume) to identify the substance.
a. Find the units of the hidden constant in P = W/t (SI system), where P is power in
watts, W is work in newton-meters, and t is in seconds.
b. Convert to constant to the AES system, where P is power in horsepower, W is work in
foot-pounds of force, and t is in minutes.
4. A cylindrical sandstone sample, one inch in diameter and one inch long has a pore volume of 0.275
in3. The pores are partially filled with 0.135 in 3 of water. What is the porosity and water saturation of
the sample?
5. A cylindrical sandstone sample, one inch in diameter and one inch long is placed in a permeameter
and water having a viscosity of one centipoise is flowed through the circular faces of the sample at a rate
of one cm3/s under a pressure difference of one atmosphere. What is the permeability of the sample?
6. An acre-ft of reservoir has a bulk volume of 43,560 ft 3. Calculate the volume of water (in barrels per
acre-ft) for a sandstone reservoir having a porosity of 20 % and a water saturation of 25 %.
7. A rock sample is 1 inch long and 1 inch in diameter. The sample is used for some steady-state flow
tests. Calculate the permeability of the rock if it is completely saturated with water having a viscosity of
1 cp and water is flowed through the sample at a rate of 0.5 in 3/min and the pressure drop is 10 psi.
8. Find the conversion constant to calculate permeability in md from a horizontal, linear flow experiment
when flow rate is in cm3/s, viscosity is in cp, length is in cm, and pressure drop is in dynes/cm 2.
9. Find the conversion constant to calculate permeability in md from a horizontal, linear flow experiment
when flow rate is in m3/day, viscosity is in cp, length is in m, and pressure drop is in kPa.
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10. Suppose you are the drilling engineer on a rig. You have set 9 5/8 in OD, 40 lb m/ft casing (ID =
8.835 in) from 0 to 2000 ft and have drilled a 7 7/8 in bore hole from 2000 to 4000 ft.
11. Find the conversion constant to calculate pressure gradient in psi/ft when fluid density is in lb m/gal
(ppg)
a. What is its bottom hole temperature if the mean surface temperature is 60 oF and the
local temperature gradient is 1.1 oF/100 ft?
b. What is its bottom hole flowing pressure if the surface flowing pressure is 900 psi
and the pressure gradient in the well bore is 0.15 psi/ft?
13. Assume a vertical well drains a right cylindrically shaped oil reservoir for which you have the
following data:
porosity 0.22
water saturation 0.30
gas formation volume factor 1.0 rb/MScf
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Problem Layout
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Conversion Factors
To convert from Multiply by To obtain
acres 4.356 x 104 sq feet
acres 4.047 x 103 sq meters
acre-feet 4.356 x 104 cubic feet
atmospheres 7.6 x 101 cm of mercury at 0 oC
atmospheres 3.39 x 101 ft of water at 4 oC
atmospheres 1.01325 x 105 pascals
atmospheres 1.4696 x 101 pounds-force/sq in
barrels(oil) 5.614583 cubic feet
barrels(oil) 4.2 x 101 gallons
barrels(oil)/d 2.295 x 10-3 cubic meters/s
Btu 1.0550 x 1010 ergs
Btu 7.7816 x 102 ft-pounds
Btu 3.927 x 10-4 horsepower-hours
Btu 1.055 x 103 joules
Btu 2.928 x 10-4 kilowatt-hours
centimeters 3.281 x 10-2 feet
centimeters 3.937 x 10-1 inches
centimeters 6.214 x 10-6 miles
cm of mercury 1.316 x 10-2 atmospheres
cm of mercury 4.461 x 10-1 ft of water
cm of mercury 1.333 x 103 pascals
cm of mercury 1.934 x 10-1 pounds-force/sq in
cm/s 1.969 ft/min
cm/s 3.281 x 10-1 ft/s
cm/s 3.6 x 10-2 kilometers/h
cm/s 2.237 x 10-2 miles/h
centipoise 1.0 x 10-3 pascal-seconds
cubic cm 6.28982 x 10-6 barrels(oil)
cubic cm 3.531 x 10-5 cubic ft
cubic cm 2.642 x 10-4 gallons
cubic cm 1.0 x 10-3 liters
cubic cm/s 5.434 x 10-1 barrels(oil)/d
cubic feet 1.781 x 10-1 barrels(oil)
cubic feet 2.832 x 10-2 cubic meters
cubic feet 7.48052 gallons
cubic feet 2.832 x 101 liters
cubic ft/d 3.278 x 10-7 cubic meters/s
cubic feet/h 4.275 barrels(oil)/d
cubic feet/min 4.720 x 10-1 liters/s
cubic feet/s 4.48831 x 102 gallons/min
cubic meters 6.28982 barrels(oil)
cubic meters 3.531 x 101 cubic ft
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To convert from Multiply by To obtain
cubic meters 2.642 x 102 gallons
cubic meters 1.0 x 103 liters
cubic meters/s 5.434 x 105 barrels(oil)/d
darcies 9.869233 x10-13 sq meters
dynes/sq cm 9.869233 x 10-7 atmospheres
dynes 1.0 x 10-5 joules/meter (newtons)
dynes 2.248 x 10-6 pounds-force
ergs 9.486 x 10-11 Btu
ergs 7.376 x10-8 ft-pounds
ergs 1.0 x 10-7 joules
ergs 2.773 x 10-14 kilowatt-hrs
ergs/s 1.341 x 10-10 horsepower
feet 3.048 x 10-4 kilometers
feet 3.048 x 10-1 meters
feet 1.894 x 10-4 miles
feet of water 2.950 x 10-2 atmospheres
feet of water 2.242 cm of mercury
feet of water 2.989 x 103 pascals
feet of water 4.335 x 10-1 pounds-force/sq in
feet/min 1.829 x 10-2 km/hr
feet/min 3.048 x 10-1 meters/min
feet/min 1.136 x 10-2 miles/h
feet/s 1.097 km/h
feet/s 1.829 x 101 meters/min
feet/s 6.818 x 10-1 miles/h
feet/s2 3.048 x 10-1 meters/s2
foot-pounds 1.286 x 10-3 Btu
foot-pounds 1.356 x 107 ergs
foot-pounds 1.356 joules
foot-pounds 1.383 x 10-1 kg-m
foot-pounds 3.766 x 10-7 kilowatt-h
foot-pounds/min 1.286 x 10-3 Btu/min
foot-pounds/min 3.030 x 10-5 horsepower
foot-pounds/min 2.260 x 10-5 kilowatts
foot-pounds/s 4.6263 Btu/h
foot-pounds/s 1.818 x 10-3 horsepower
foot-pounds/s 1.356 x 10-3 kilowatts
gallons 2.381 x 10-2 barrels(oil)
gallons 1.337 x 10-1 cubic ft
gallons 3.785 x 10-3 cubic meters
gallons 3.785 liters
gallons/min 2.228 x 10-3 cu ft/s
grams 2.205 x 10-3 pounds-mass
horsepower 4.244 x 101 btu/min
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To convert from Multiply by To obtain
horsepower 3.3 x 104 ft-lb/min
horsepower 5.50 x 102 ft-lb/s
horsepower 7.457 x 10-1 kilowatts
horsepower-hours 2.547 x 103 Btu
horsepower-hours 1.98 x 106 ft-lb
horsepower-hours 2.684 x 106 joules
inches 2.540 centimeters
inches 2.540 x 10-2 meters
joules 9.486 x 10-4 Btu
joules 7.376 x 10-1 ft-pounds
joules/s 5.6907 x 10-2 Btu/min
kilograms 2.2046 pounds-mass
kilograms/cu m 6.243 x 10-2 pounds-mass/cu ft
kilometers 3.281 x 103 ft
kilometers 6.214 x 10-1 miles
kilometers/h 5.468 x 101 ft/min
kilometers/h 9.113 x 10-1 ft/s
kilometers/h 6.214 x 10-1 miles/h
kilowatts 1.341 horsepower
kilowatt hour 3.413 x 103 Btu
kilowatt hour 2.655 x 106 ft-lb
kilowatt hour 3.6 x 106 joules
liters 1.0 x 103 cubic cm
liters 3.531 x 10-2 cubic ft
liters 1.0 x 10-3 cubic meters
liters 2.642 x 10-1 gallons
liters/s 1.5850 x 101 gallons/min
meters 3.281 ft
meters 3.937 x 101 inches
meters 6.214 x 10-4 miles
meters 1.094 yards
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meters/s 1.968 x 102 ft/min
meters/s 3.281 ft/s
meters/s 3.6 km/h
meters/s 2.237 miles/h
miles 5.280 x 103 ft
miles 1.609 kilometers
miles 1.609 x 103 meters
miles/h 8.8 x 101 ft/min.
miles/h 1.467 ft/s
miles/h 1.6093 km/h
miles/h 2.682 x 101 meters/min
newtons 1.0 x 105 dynes
pounds-force 4.4482 x 105 dynes
29
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