منتدى شباب جامعة إب
نـثر مـرورك في الــدرب زهـراً وريحانـا . . . وفاح عبــق اســــمك بوجـودك الفتــانـــا

فإن نطقت بخيـر فهو لشخصك إحسانا . . . وإن نطقت بشر فهو على شخصك نكرانا

وإن بقيت بين إخوانك فنحـن لك أعوانـا . . . وإن غادرت فنحن لك ذاكرين فلا تنسـانــا


منتدى شباب جامعة إب
نـثر مـرورك في الــدرب زهـراً وريحانـا . . . وفاح عبــق اســــمك بوجـودك الفتــانـــا

فإن نطقت بخيـر فهو لشخصك إحسانا . . . وإن نطقت بشر فهو على شخصك نكرانا

وإن بقيت بين إخوانك فنحـن لك أعوانـا . . . وإن غادرت فنحن لك ذاكرين فلا تنسـانــا


منتدى شباب جامعة إب
هل تريد التفاعل مع هذه المساهمة؟ كل ما عليك هو إنشاء حساب جديد ببضع خطوات أو تسجيل الدخول للمتابعة.



 
الرئيسيةمركز رفع الصورأحدث الصورالتسجيلدخولتسجيل دخول الاعضاء
منتدى شباب جامعة إب منتدى ,علمي ,ثقافي ,ادبي ,ترفيهي, يضم جميع اقسام كليات الجامعة وكذا يوفر الكتب والمراجع والدراسات والابحاث التي يحتاجها الطالب في دراسته وابحاثه وكذا يفتح ابواب النقاش وتبادل المعلومات والمعارف بين الطلاب. كما اننا نولي ارائكم واقتراحاتكم اهتمامنا المتواصل . يمكنكم ارسال اقتراحاتكم الى ادارة المنتدى او كتابتها في قسم الاقتراحات والشكاوى

 

 A brief history of petroleum

اذهب الى الأسفل 
كاتب الموضوعرسالة
Arwa Alshoaibi
مشرفـة عـامـة
مشرفـة عـامـة
Arwa Alshoaibi


كيف تعرفت علينا : ............
الكــلــيــة : ........
القسم ( التخصص ) : .......
السنة الدراسية (المستوى الدراسي) : .......
الجنس : انثى
عدد الرسائل : 12959
العمر : 35
الدوله : بعيييييييييييييييييييييييييييييد
العمل/الترفيه : القراءه والاطلاع على كل جديد
المزاج : متقلب المزاج
نقاط : 18850
تاريخ التسجيل : 16/04/2010
: :قائمة الأوسمة : :
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A brief history of petroleum 1800010


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مُساهمةموضوع: A brief history of petroleum   A brief history of petroleum Icon_minitimeالجمعة يناير 07, 2011 9:49 pm

Upstream, Downstream, All Around the Stream - A brief history of petroleum


All of the oil world is
divided into three: 1) The "upstream" comprises exploration and
production; 2) The "midstream" are the tankers and pipelines that carry
crude oil to refineries, and; 3) The "downstream" which includes
refining, marketing, and distribution, right down to the corner gasoline
station or convenient store. A company that includes together
significant upstream and downstream activities is said to be
"integrated".

By generally accepted
theory, crude oil is the residue of organic waste--primarily microscopic
plankton floating in seas, and also land plants--that accumulated at
the bottom of oceans, lakes, and coastal areas. Over millions of years,
this organic matter, rich in carbon and hydrogen atoms, was collected
beneath successive levels of sediments. Pressure and underground heat
"cooked" the plant matter, converting it into hydrocarbons--oil and
natural gas. The tiny droplets of oil liquid migrated through small
pores and fractures in the rocks until they were trapped in permeable
rocks, sealed by shale rocks on top and heavier salt water at the
bottom.

Typically, in such a
reservoir, the lightest gas fills the pores of the reservoir rock as a
"gas cap" above the oil. When a drill bit penetrates the reservoir, the
lower pressure inside the bit allows the oil fluid to flow into the well
bore and then to the surface as a flowing well. "Gushers" - "oil
fountains" as they were called in Russia--resulted from failure (or, at
the time, inability) to manage the pressure of the rising oil. As
production continues over time, the underground pressure runs down, and
the wells need help to keep going, either from surface pumps or from gas
reinjected back into the well, known as "gas lift". What comes to the
surface is hot crude oil, sometimes accompanied by natural gas.

But as it flows from a
well, crude oil itself is a commodity with very few direct uses.
Virtually all crude is processed in a refinery to turn it into useful
products like gasoline, jet fuel, home heating oil, and industrial fuel
oil.

In the early years of the
industry, a refinery was little more than a still where the crude was
boiled and then the different products were condensed out at various
temperatures. The skills required were not all that different from
making moonshine, which is why whiskey makers went into oil refining in
the nineteenth century. Today, a refinery is often a large, complex,
sophisticated, and expensive manufacturing facility.

Crude oil is a mixture of
petroleum liquids and gases in various combinations. Each of these
compounds has some value, but only as they are isolated in the refining
process. So, the first step in refining is to separate the crude into
constituent parts. This is accomplished by thermal
distillation--heating. The various components vaporize at different
temperatures and then can be condensed back into pure "streams".

Some streams can be sold
as they are. Others are put through further processes to obtain
higher-value products. In simple refineries, these processes are
primarily from the removal of unwanted impurities and to make minor
changes in chemical properties. In more complex refineries, major
restructuring of the molecules is carried out through chemical processes
that are known as "cracking" or "conversion". The result is an increase
in the quantity of higher-quality products, such as gasoline, and a
decrease in the output of such lower-value products as fuel oil and
asphalt.

Crude oil and refined
products alike are today moved by tankers, pipelines, barges, and
trucks. In Europe, oil is often officially measured in metric tons; in
Japan, in kiloliters. But in the United States and Canada, and
colloquially throughout the world, the basic unit remains in "barrel",
though there is hardly an oil man today who has seen an old-fashioned
crude oil barrel, except in a museum.

When oil first started
flowing out of the wells in western Pennsylvania in the 1860's,
desperate oil men ransacked farmhouses, barns, cellars, stores, and
trashyards for any kind of barrel--molasses, beer, whiskey, cider,
turpentine, sale, fish, and whatever else was handy. But as coopers
began to make barrels specially for the oil trade, one standard size
emerged, and that size continues to be the norm to the present. It is 42
gallons.

The number was borrowed
from England, where a statute in 1482 under King Edward IV established
42 gallons as the standard size barrel for herring in order to end
skullduggery and "divers deceits" in the packing of fish. At the time,
herring fishing was the biggest business in the North Sea. By 1866,
seven years after Colonel Drake drilled his well, Pennsylvania producers
confirmed the 42-gallon barrel as their standard, as opposed to , say,
the 31 1/2 gallon wine barrel or the 32 gallon London ale barrel or the
36 gallon London beer barrel.

And that, in a roundabout
way, brings us right back to the present day. For the 42 gallon barrel
is still used as the standard measurement, even if not as a physical
receptacle, in the biggest business in the North Sea--which today of
course in not herring, but oil.

This article taken from "The Prize" by Daniel Yergin













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A brief history of petroleum
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 مواضيع مماثلة
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» A Brief History of the English Language
» Petroleum Products
» PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT GEOLOGY
» Petroleum Products Handbook
» Dictionary for the Petroleum Industry

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