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The Fossil Fuels: Oil

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Title: The Fossil Fuels: Oil


1
The Fossil FuelsOil
Lecture 4 HNRT 228 Spring 2016 Energy and the
Environment
2
Why is the term, FOSSIL FUEL used for coal, oil,
gas and lignite?A Because they all contain
fossils.B Because they were once food sources
for things that are now fossils.C Because they
are derived from living matter of a previous
geological age.D Because of their energy per
unit of mass.E Because Prof. Geller said so.
3
  • Recall Exercise Draw a flow map showing the flow
    of energy transformations in a car from starting
    vehicle to driving. You should have 5 different
    types of energy.

4
Energy Transfer
Sound (mechanical)
Electrical
Thermal
Mechanical
Electrical
Chemical
Electrical
Light (Electromagnetic)
5
Oil Exploration and Extraction
  • Oil is a fossil fuel
  • formed from the remains of plants and animals
  • died in ancient seas around 300 million years ago
  • Biota such as plankton fall to the bottom of the
    sea and decay
  • form sedimentary layers
  • little or no oxygen present
  • microorganisms break down the remains into
    carbon-rich compounds
  • organic material mixes with the sediments to form
    fine-grained shale, or source rock
  • sedimentary rocks layer generate heat and
    pressure
  • distilled organic material forms crude oil and
    natural gas
  • oil flows from the source rock and accumulates in
    thicker, more porous limestone or sandstone known
    as reservoir rock.
  • When the Earths crust moves, the oil and natural
    gas is trapped in reservoir rocks, which are
    between layers of impermeable rock (cap rock
    usually granite or marble)

http//www.energyquest.ca.gov/story/chapter08.html
6
iClicker Question
  • Oil is a fossil fuel formed from the remains of
    plants and animals which
  • A formed on another planet billions of years ago
  • B formed on Earth a few billion years ago
  • C formed on Earth in the past few thousand years
  • D died on another celestial object around 300
    million years ago
  • E died in ancient seas on Earth around 300
    million years ago

7
iClicker Question
  • Oxygen is required in the formation of oil in the
    sedimentary layers
  • A True
  • B False

8
  • The Search for Oil
  • Oil companies usually contract out the search for
    oil to exploration geophysicists
  • Exploration geophysicists utilize
  • surface features
  • surface rock
  • reservoir rock
  • entrapment
  • satellite images
  • gravity meters
  • magnetometers
  • hydrocarbon sniffers sometimes called electronic
    noses
  • seismometers most common technique used
  • shock waves developed
  • reflections interpreted
  • Oil exploration methods are still only about 10
    percent successful in producing useful well

http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-drilling2.htm
http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-drilling1.htm
9
iClicker Question
  • What is the name of a scientist who explores for
    oil?
  • A oil scientist
  • B exploration geophysicist
  • C petroleum physicist
  • D All of the above
  • E Only A and B above

10
Once a Site is Selected
Getting the land ready
Making way for the rig
  • The area is surveyed to determine its boundaries.
  • Environmental studies are said to be done.
  • The land is cleared and then access roads are
    built.
  • Water is drilled if there are no natural sources
    available.
  • A reserve pit is dug to dispose of rock cuttings
    and mud. It is lined with plastic to protect
    the environment only if the area is considered to
    be ecologically sensitive.
  • Several holes are dug to make way for the rig and
    main hole
  • A rectangular pit (cellar) is dug around the
    location of the drilling hole. (This provides a
    workspace)
  • The crew drills a main hole
  • Additional holes are dug to the side to store
    equipment

11
iClicker Question
  • Which of the following instruments is (are) used
    to help discover oil?
  • A seismometers
  • B magnetometers
  • C electronic noses
  • D All of the above (A,B and C)
  • E Only A and B above

12
Setting Up the Rig
  • Once the land is ready, several holes are dug to
    make way for the rig and main hole. A rectangular
    pit, called a cellar, is dug around the location
    of the actual drilling hole. The cellar provides
    a workspace around the hole. The crew then drills
    a main hole. The following diagram shows how a
    rig is set.

http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-drilling2.htm
13
Drilling
Directions on drilling
  • Place drill bit, collar and drill pipe in the
    hole
  • Attach the Kelly (six-sided pipe that transfers
    rotary motion to the turntable and drill string)
    and turntable
  • Begin drilling
  • As drilling progresses, circulate mud through the
    pipe and out of the bit to float the rock cutting
    out of the hole
  • Add new sections (joints) of drill pipes as the
    hole gets deeper.
  • Remove the drill pipe, collar and bit when the
    pre-set depth is reached
  • anywhere from a few hundred to a couple thousand
    feet

Photo courtesy Institute of Petroleum
http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-drilling1.htm
14
Confirming the Presence of Oil
  • After the pre-wet depth is reached, the workers
    run and cement the casing pipe sections into the
    hole to prevent it from collapsing. Drilling
    continues in stages. When the rock cuttings from
    the mud reveal the oil sand from the reservoir
    rock, they may have reached the final depth. At
    this point, they remove the drilling apparatus
    from the hole and perform several tests to
    confirm the presence of oil. These tests are Well
    logging, Drill-stem testing, and Core samples.

Photo courtesy Phillips Petroleum Co.Rotary
workers trip drill pipehttp//science.howstuffwor
ks.com/oil-drilling4.htm
15
iClicker Question
  • What is a typical drill depth for an oil well?
  • A Several hundred feet
  • B 1000 feet
  • C Several thousand feet
  • D All of the above
  • E Only A and B above

16
Extracting the Oil
  • Once the well is completed, the operators must
    start the flow of oil into the well. For
    limestone reservoir rock, acid is pumped down the
    well and out the perforations. For sandstone
    reservoir rock, a special blended fuel containing
    proppants (i.e. material suspended in water) is
    pumped down the well and out the perforations.
    The pressure from this fluid makes small
    fractures in the sandstone that allow oil to flow
    into the well, while the proppants hold these
    fractures open. Once the oil is flowing, the oil
    rig is removed from the site and production
    equipment is set up to extract the oil from the
    well.

http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-drilling4.htm
http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-drilling4.ht
m
17
iClicker Question
  • Which of the following is (are) used to confirm
    the presence of oil in a well?
  • A Core samples
  • B Well logging
  • C Drill stem testing
  • D All of the above
  • E Only A and B above

18
Crude oil to Refineries
  • Oil fields and offshore oil rigs generally have
    hundreds of wells with flow lines that carry
    crude oil to the lease tanks. The crude oil flows
    from the wells to the unseen lease tanks via the
    flow lines, where it is accumulated, sampled and
    measured prior to further transportation via
    other connecting pipelines. Oil pipelines are
    considered to be a closed system since the
    chemicals theoretically dont touch the
    environment, however leaks in the system do
    occur. Also, oil tankers bring oil to refineries
    and as was the case in the Exxon Valdez disaster,
    the environment suffers tremendously from oil
    production.

Photo Courtesy http//response.restoration.noaa.go
v/photos/exxon/exxon.html
19
Environmental DisastersTanker Oil Spills
Graphic courtesy of http//www.itopf.com/informati
on-services/data-and-statistics/statistics/major
20
iClicker Question
  • What is the name of the suspension used to keep
    fractures in rock open and allow oil to flow?
  • A crackant
  • B fracture suspension
  • C flowant
  • D fracturant
  • E proppant

21
Fractional Distillation
  • Heat the mixture of two or more substances with
    different boiling points to a high temperature.
    Heating is usually done with high-pressure steam
    to temperatures of about 1112 degrees
    Fahrenheit/600 degrees Celsius
  • The mixture boils, forming vapor (gases) most
    substances go into the vapor phase.
  • The vapor enters the bottom of a long column
    (fractional distillation column) that is filled
    with trays or plates.
  • The vapor rises in the column
  • As the vapor rises through the trays in the
    column, it cools.
  • When a substance in the vapor reaches a height
    where the temperature of the column is equal to
    the substances boiling point, it will condense to
    form a liquid.
  • The trays collect the various liquid fractions
  • The collected liquid fractions may pass to
    condensers, which cool them further, and then go
    to storage tanks or go to other areas for further
    chemical processing.

22
  • Further chemical processing is required to make
    various products
  • gasoline, lubricating oils, kerosene, jet fuel,
    heating oil, chemicals for plastics and other
    polymers
  • It is possible to change one fraction into
    another through three methods
  • cracking, unification, and alteration.
  • Cracking takes large hydrocarbons and breaks them
    into smaller ones

http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-refining5.htm
23
iClicker Question
  • The process by which components in a chemical
    mixture are separated according to their
    different boiling points, is called
  • A Distillationism
  • B Fractionation
  • C Fractioning
  • D Fractional distillation
  • E Fractional fractionating

24
  • Unification is the process where smaller
    hydrocarbons are combined to make larger ones.
    The main unification process is called catalytic
    reforming and uses a catalyst to combine low
    weight naphtha into aromatics which are used in
    making chemicals and in blending gasoline.
  • Alteration The structures of molecules in one
    fraction are rearranged to produce another.
    Commonly this is done using alkylation- low
    molecular weight compounds are mixed in the
    presence of a catalysts such as hydrofluoric acid
    or sulfuric acid.

http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-refining5.htm
http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-refining5.htm
25
Distilled and chemically processed fractions are
treated to remove impurities by passing the
fractions through the followingA column of
sulfuric acidAn absorption column filled with
drying agents to remove waterSulfur treatment
and hydrogen-sulfide scrubbers to remove sulfur
and sulfur compounds
http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-refining3.htm
26
Products From Refined Oil Refraction
  • gasoline of various grades, with or without
    additives
  • lubricating oils of various weights and grades
    (e.g. 10W-40, 5W-30)
  • kerosene of various grades
  • jet fuel
  • diesel fuel
  • heating oil
  • chemicals of various grades for making plastics
    and other polymers

http//science.howstuffworks.com/oil-refining6.htm
27
Oil, Gasoline, Polymers, and Plastics are moved
around to the marketplace in trucks, trains,
ships and via pipelines
  • Tanker trucks hold around 9,000 gallons of
    gasoline
  • Tanker ships hold around 1.26 million barrels of
    oil
  • It would take 14 and a quarter tanker ships to
    carry all the oil that the U.S consumes in one
    day
  • The U.S alone has over 200,000 miles of oil
    pipelines

Photo courtesy of chevron.com
28
Oil Transportation Issues
  • Numerous cases of land, ocean and lake spills of
    petroleum have occurred all over the world,
    causing the irregular operation of petroleum
    pumping, fluid transport, tank storage, plant and
    refinery, and maritime and truck transport
    facilities.
  • Spills and leaks of petroleum and refined
    products have been detected from overflowing
    tanks, leaking extraction and pumping stations,
    ocean tankers and tank trucks.
  • Petroleum and derivatives have spilled into
    lakes, the ocean, and land areas surrounding
    industry facilities.
  • Loaded tank trucks have overturned, spilling
    diesel and gasoline fuel on roads and highways.

29
iClicker Question
  • Which of the following are not petroleum derived
    products?
  • A gasoline
  • B kerosene
  • C jet fuel
  • D plastics
  • E None of the above

30
Gas Stations Leak
  • Methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) -- a gasoline
    additive has been detected in wells, lakes and
    underground aquifers across the country
  • In California (with 27 million vehicles and over
    9,500 gas stations) MTBE has contaminated some
    10,000 shallow groundwater sites, including 1,000
    in the San Francisco Bay Area. It has been found
    in dozens of state lakes and reservoirs,
    including Shasta, Tahoe and Donner in the north
    and Castaic, Pyramid and Perris in the south.
  • The U.S. Geological Survey has found MTBE in more
    than a quarter of the nation's shallow urban
    wells, as well as in streams, lakes, rain and
    snow.
  • Researchers have found that MTBE can cause cancer
    in animals, and they believe it is a potential
    carcinogen in human beings.
  • In South Lake Tahoe, leaks at underground gas
    station tanks have caused the water district to
    close 12 of 34 wells.

31
World Oil Consumption
In 1,000 of barrels per day Source BP
Statistical Review of World Energy.
A forecast from 2000
32
(No Transcript)
33
(No Transcript)
34
Peak Oil Concept
  • Hubberts Peak

Norway
World
M. King Hubbert
35
Any nonrenewable resource (like oil) tends to
have a Gaussian-like graph of usage versus time
Why?
area is the total amount consumed
36
Are we really now at the peak of the amount so
far consumed?
  • The world now has around 40 years of proven
    reserves of oil. Dr. Steve Koonin, BP Chief
    scientist

The 2 statements are quite consistent, given a
FWHM of around 80yrs see previous slide
Full width at half max
FWHM
37
Implications of peak oil What happens
afterwards?-- possibly a much nearer-term issue
than climate change
  • Oil becomes increasingly expensive scarce
  • Increasing international competition for oil
  • Increasing incentive to conserve
  • Just how inelastic is the price-use
    relationship?
  • Increasing pressure for alternatives
  • Will these factors have mostly desirable or
    undesirable consequences?

38
Products Consumed from Oil
http//www.eia.doe.gov/kids/non-renewable/oil.html
39
Oil Waste
  • CO2 released to the atmosphere when oil burned
  • Petroleum derived plastics dumped into landfills,
    if not recycled, and can seep into soil over
    time.
  • An oil well can produce 1,500 tons of toxic
    drilling muds which are dumped into rivers,
    streams and soils.
  • Wastewater from can contain hazardous chemicals.
  • Average refinery generates 10,000 gallons/day of
    waste containing toxic chemicals known to cause
    cancer, birth defects, or breathing problems.
  • Refineries create added burden of pollution in
    the areas within which they reside.
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