Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate

In summary, the conversation discusses the issue of accurately measuring the rate of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. The primary topic of skepticism is the quality of the video footage being used for analysis. The conversation also references patents and a company specializing in particle image velocimetry, a method used for measuring motion within a fluid body. There are concerns about whether this method can be accurately applied to the oil spill, as it requires specific conditions that may not be present in the footage available. There are also questions about the accuracy of surface estimates and the use of dispersants at such depths.
  • #1
russ_watters
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In the thread in P&WA on the issue of the oil spill, I expressed my skepticism that the rate of the spill could be accurately measured via analysis of underwater video clips. That skepticism was strengthened by the recent statement by Prof Steven Wereley, the originator of the first such estimate, that his earlier estimate was "consderably" low, despite his previous claim of a 20% margin for error. So I'd like to gain a better understanding of his method and if it is reasonable to believe it can be accurate in this case.

For background information...
Here is the wiki on particle image velocimetry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle_image_velocimetry
Here is the Wereley's 1998 patent on the subject: http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-...ey+AND+velocimetry&RS=wereley+AND+velocimetry
Here is Wereley's 2006 patent on the subject: http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-...ey+AND+velocimetry&RS=wereley+AND+velocimetry
 
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  • #2
Well here is the problem so far I have only seen clips from one of the places the oil is leaking and it looks like a ton of oil is coming out. However I heard from cnn that there are multiple places the oil is leaking from. If I could see all the places the oil is coming from I would just add about how much oil is coming out at any moment and then just do the math to figure out how much should have came out factoring for that the oil probably came out faster as more pressure when the oilfield first started to leak. I mean I am not totally sure the people in charge of this even know the main places it's leaking. I heard someone suggest droping an atomic bomb down there to try and seal it up however at that pressure I am not sure what an atom bomb will do to seal anything. I saw a video on how to extract oil from water with straw. It might be a good idea to buy some straw for your drinking water in the far future depending on how bad this gets.
 
  • #3
The primary source of skepticism about this method could be accurately applied to the gulf oil spill is the quality of the video. The video is low resolution and presumably shot at a pretty high shutter speed due to the depth, which presumably would make it very difficult to lock-on to particles and track them to measure their velocity.

Here's the primary claim from the first patent:
1. A method of measuring motion within a fluid body comprising the steps of: (a) injecting a plurality of solid particles into the fluid body in dispersed relation to move therewith; (b) applying a short pulse of light through an objective lens to the fluid body so as to broadly illuminate the fluid body, and then repeating the application of the light pulse after a known time delay; (c) after each pulse of the applied light, observing through the same objective lens the light scattered from the individual solid particles; (d) wherein only light from the solid particles lying within the depth of field of the objective lens will produce well-focused discrete images of discrete particles, thereby determining a two-dimensional measurement plane in the flowing fluid; and (e) comparing discrete images of discrete particles successively observed in the measurement plane as a function of time to determine the motion of the fluid body.
This says that the method uses depth of field effects of photography to ensure you can focus on a thin plane of particles injected into the fluid stream and a strobe light operating on the nanosecond range to illuminate discrete particles. Neither of those conditions are available in this video and they seem to me to be pretty important and specific requirements.

The 2003 patent appears to me to be a microscopic version of the same thing.

From a company specializing in the technique:
Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) measures whole velocity fields by taking two images shortly after each other and calculating the distance individual particles traveled within this time. From the known time difference and the measured displacement the velocity is calculated. Since the flow can be quite fast one has to avoid blurred images and that‘s one reason to use laser pulses. They are only 6-10 ns long and freeze any motion. The other reason is that only laser light can be focused into a thin enough light sheet so that only particles in that plane are imaged. Otherwise the scattered light from particles in other planes would make this measurement impossible. A special camera is utilized so that it can store the first image (frame) fast enough to be ready for the second exposure. The "dead" time between the frames when the camera is "blind" is very short down to 100 ns.
 
  • #4
If I could get my hands on the size of the oilfield I could probably just figure it out by factoring for the size of the pipe the oil travels out of with all pressures and stuff...
 
  • #5
russ_watters said:
Here is the Wereley's 1998 patent on the subject:
Here is Wereley's 2006 patent on the subject:

From the 2006 patent:
(b) applying a short pulse of light through an objective lens to the fluid body so as to broadly illuminate the fluid body, and then repeating the application of the light pulse after a known time delay;

So the patented method is not applicable, as it requires active controlled illumination.
 
  • #6
Perhaps you could see he would be willing to address these concerns here? You never know, and his info is available at the Purdue U site https://engineering.purdue.edu/Engr/People/ptProfile?resource_id=11641 . Divining what his methodology is from, a 12 and 4 year old patent respectively seems to be more amusing than scientific.

How does this square with a similar estimate using pencil and paper by Chiang? In addition, when we know that surface estimates are meaningless in the presence of deep plumes, and the use of dispersants at such a depth?

May 13th article said:
BP has said repeatedly that there is no reliable way to measure the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico by looking at the oil gushing out of the pipe. But scientists say there are actually many proven techniques for doing just that.

Steven Wereley, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University, analyzed videotape of the seafloor gusher using a technique called particle image velocimetry.

A computer program simply tracks particles and calculates how fast they are moving. Wereley put the BP video of the gusher into his computer. He made a few simple calculations and came up with an astonishing value for the rate of the oil spill: 70,000 barrels a day -- much higher than the official estimate of 5,000 barrels a day.

The method is accurate to a degree of plus or minus 20 percent.Given that uncertainty, the amount of material spewing from the pipe could range from 56,000 barrels to 84,000 barrels a day. It is important to note that it's not all oil. The short video BP released starts out with a shot of methane, but at the end it seems to be mostly oil."There's potentially some fluctuation back and forth between methane and oil," Wereley said.

But assuming that the lion's share of the material coming out of the pipe is oil, Wereley's calculations show that the official estimates are too low.

"We're talking more than a factor-of-10 difference between what I calculate and the number that's being thrown around," he said.

At least two other calculations support him.

Timothy Crone, an associate research scientist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, used another well-accepted method to calculate fluid flows. Crone arrived at a similar figure, but he said he'd like better video from BP before drawing a firm conclusion.

Eugene Chiang, a professor of astrophysics at the University of California, Berkeley, also got a similar answer, using just pencil and paper.

Without even having a sense of scale from the BP video, he correctly deduced that the diameter of the pipe was about 20 inches. And though his calculation is less precise than Wereley's, it is in the same ballpark."I would peg it at around 20,000 to 100,000 barrels per day," he said.

Chiang called the current estimate of 5,000 barrels a day "almost certainly incorrect."

Given this flow rate, it seems this is a spill of unprecedented proportions in U.S. waters.

"It would just take a few days, at most a week, for it to exceed the Exxon Valdez's record," Chiang said.

BP disputed these figures.

"We've said all along that there's no way to estimate the flow coming out of the pipe accurately," said Bill Salvin, a BP spokesman.

Instead, BP prefers to rely on measurements of oil on the sea surface made by the Coast Guard and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Those are also contentious. Salvin also says these analyses should not assume that the oil is spewing from the 21-inch pipe, called a riser, shown in the video.

"The drill pipe, from which the oil is rising, is actually a 9-inch pipe that rests within the riser," Slavin said.But Wereley says that fact doesn't skew his calculation. And though scientists say they hope BP will eventually release more video and information so they can refine their estimates, what they have now is good enough."It's possible to get a pretty decent number by looking at the video," Wereley said.

On the technical side, mheslep is simply wrong, in that the method requires this laser pulse. It is PREFERABLE, and necessary to achieve the desired sub-pixel accuracy. Note then, that Wereley's figures differ from controlled PIV confidence in assemblymen by orders of magnitude.

Wikipedia regarding accuracy of PIV said:
Displacement can typically be accurate down to 10% of one pixel on the image plane.
Clearly this was not achieved in the absence of markers added, or a controlled pulse or binocular setup. That reduces accuracy, but does not necessarily invalidate the estimate as offered, nor the conclusion that surface estimates are grossly misleading by comparison. Perhaps if BP or the USCG would allow the addition of a small number of markers, this could be achieved. One wonders why this has yet to occur given that we are hours away from this having been an issue for a month.
 
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  • #7
I'm new here and unfamiliar with the rules on specificity to subject matter being discussed so please excuse me for introducing a tangential question about the oil leak. I recently asked this question in Earth forum but it seems I should have asked it here.
According to news media sources the vast majority of the oil is either slowly settling to the bottom, billowing around at various depths, or slowly surfacing. Nobody seems to know.
I've been thinking that the potential impact of the leak would depend on the answer.
I've been wondering how much the density of the crude is affected by the pressures at that depth. These long chain hydrocarbons are subject to compressibility so density should increase. But, enough to keep the stuff down there?
My tech college math skills are thirty years unused and not in the engineering field, so basically I'm a layman.

came across this but I'm unsure of how to apply it, or even whether it's pertinent to the question:
http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/bulk-modulus-elasticity-d_585.html

Can anyone tell how the pressure is affecting the density of the stuff?
 
  • #8
Hi gwangi,
gwangi said:
According to news media sources the vast majority of the oil is either slowly settling to the bottom, billowing around at various depths, or slowly surfacing. Nobody seems to know.
I've been thinking that the potential impact of the leak would depend on the answer.
I've been wondering how much the density of the crude is affected by the pressures at that depth. These long chain hydrocarbons are subject to compressibility so density should increase. But, enough to keep the stuff down there?
Interesting question. Petroleum is of course, a mixture of various hydrocarbons, and I have no idea what hydrocarbons are being released but I suspect it is fair to say they are relatively heavy with carbon chains in the neighborhood of 15 to 25 carbons. Let's assume the carbon chains follow the general rule CnH2n+2 and look at a couple of different hydrocarbons at 2500 psia and 40 F. There are reports of tar balls washing ashore, so I'll include an even heavier hydrocarbon. Here's what the density looks like:
C16H34: 34 lb/ft3
C24H50: 50 lb/ft3
C30H62: 52 lb/ft3

From this, it looks like these hydrocarbons are less dense than seawater, so they should come to the surface. Why is there a layer of these hydrocarbons reported deep under the surface? I don't know...
 
  • #9
Q_Goest said:
Hi gwangi,

Interesting question. Petroleum is of course, a mixture of various hydrocarbons, and I have no idea what hydrocarbons are being released but I suspect it is fair to say they are relatively heavy with carbon chains in the neighborhood of 15 to 25 carbons. Let's assume the carbon chains follow the general rule CnH2n+2 and look at a couple of different hydrocarbons at 2500 psia and 40 F. There are reports of tar balls washing ashore, so I'll include an even heavier hydrocarbon. Here's what the density looks like:
C16H34: 34 lb/ft3
C24H50: 50 lb/ft3
C30H62: 52 lb/ft3

From this, it looks like these hydrocarbons are less dense than seawater, so they should come to the surface. Why is there a layer of these hydrocarbons reported deep under the surface? I don't know...

The temperatures and introduction of dispersants have been implicated, but it is still uncertain. There seems to be the range from "sheen" to "tar" and the mayonnaise-like slick in between. Hopefully congress will demand a public analysis of what BP is siphoning so we can have a better idea of how to answer these questions. The disaster has occurred, we must at least learn from this.
 
  • #10
Q_Goest said:
Hi gwangi,

Interesting question. Petroleum is of course, a mixture of various hydrocarbons, and I have no idea what hydrocarbons are being released but I suspect it is fair to say they are relatively heavy with carbon chains in the neighborhood of 15 to 25 carbons. Let's assume the carbon chains follow the general rule CnH2n+2 ...
Apparently http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naphthene" [Broken] are the majority share of petroleum; they follow CnH2(n+1-g) with g the number of H rings, and would thus be a little less dense - C24H48 and so on.
 
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  • #11
Apparently the traditional standard spill model used is the Worldwide Oil Spill Model (WOSM)
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?arnumber=00607708
 
  • #12
From my post in the politics forum, here are the differences I see between the measurement methods he's patented and what is available to him with the gulf spill:

1. Low-speed photography, using a standard camera.
2. Poor light source (no laser or strobe light).
3. Opaque fluid.
4. No pre-selected, suspended particles.
5. No specialized depth-of-field focusing.
6. Uncertain opening size (even if he got the size right, breaking-off a pipe can change the geometry of the outlet).
7. Unstable flow.
8. Uncertain and inconsistent mixture of liquid and gas.
9. Uncertain camera angle.
 
  • #13
IcedEcliptic said:
Perhaps you could see he would be willing to address these concerns here? You never know, and his info is available at the Purdue U site https://engineering.purdue.edu/Engr/People/ptProfile?resource_id=11641 . Divining what his methodology is from, a 12 and 4 year old patent respectively seems to be more amusing than scientific.
I'm trying to understand/assess the method he used to measure the flow rate. That is the purpose of this thread. A link to his homepage is not helpful.
On the technical side, mheslep is simply wrong, in that the method requires this laser pulse. It is PREFERABLE, and necessary to achieve the desired sub-pixel accuracy.
Do you have a source for that?
Clearly this was not achieved in the absence of markers added, or a controlled pulse or binocular setup. That reduces accuracy, but does not necessarily invalidate the estimate as offered, nor the conclusion that surface estimates are grossly misleading by comparison.
Do you have a source for that?

What I'm searching for myself is for any reference that says it is possible to do the measurements without such features, not personal opinions of laypeople that it should still be possible.
 
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  • #14
russ_watters said:
From my post in the politics forum, here are the differences I see between the measurement methods he's patented and what is available to him with the gulf spill:

1. Low-speed photography, using a standard camera.
2. Poor light source (no laser or strobe light).
3. Opaque fluid.
4. No pre-selected, suspended particles.
5. No specialized depth-of-field focusing.
6. Uncertain opening size (even if he got the size right, breaking-off a pipe can change the geometry of the outlet).
7. Unstable flow.
8. Uncertain and inconsistent mixture of liquid and gas.
9. Uncertain camera angle.

There are at least 8 cameras in place, and there is a binocular method. Your reasons certainly explain why a method that usually has significant sub-pixel resolution yielded a result with more leeway than accuracy, but it does not invalidate the method. The presentation by the media has been flawed, and one can argue that Wereley is to blame for that in part if that is pleasing.

I still wonder, with so many ROVs and so much access, why is the US government, BP, and other not using test particles in the effluent and reaching averages? This would seem to be critical in any attempt to back-fill, given the need to understand the pressures involved.
 
  • #15
IcedEcliptic said:
Your reasons certainly explain why a method that usually has significant sub-pixel resolution yielded a result with more leeway than accuracy, but it does not invalidate the method.
What method? I've found no reference anywhere to a method existing to do what is being suggested Wereley did. Do you have one?
The presentation by the media has been flawed...
What method? Flawed how? Can you explain exactly what he's doing and if there is any precedent for the method?
 
  • #16
russ_watters said:
What method? I've found no reference anywhere to a method existing to do what is being suggested Wereley did. Do you have one? What method? Flawed how? Can you explain exactly what he's doing and if there is any precedent for the method?

I'm afraid that without you having read the relevant book, and piracy being illegal, it would be difficult. For the flaws in the media presentation, your own posts have been more than adequate in that regard, in the 'politics' thread as you say it.
 
  • #17
The method does not image single particles nor track the movement of single particles.

The field of view is segmented and Auto-correlation is performed on Fourier transforms of "snapshots" of assemblies of particles at different times to extract flow fields - so the particles are used as markers for the bulk fluid flow.

In this case, I assume, the frames are used instead of laser flash illumination.

Auto-correlation in Fourier space has a similar effect to confocal imaging, it decreases the depth of focus of the conventional image (preferentially weights the contribution of particles that are exatly at the plane of focus).
 
  • #18
Regarding the eight cameras, I'd not heard that, but Wereley's stated he made his estimate from the same single grainy video we have all seen.

Without an operable valve upstream of the leak, and a pump that can over come the leak pressure, inserting any tracers into the flow must be nearly impossible.
 
  • #19
I've found a copy of a ppt presentation Wereley gave on the subject, on the US House website. http://energycommerce.house.gov/documents/20100519/Wereley.Presentation.05.19.2010.pdf [Broken]

Of note:
-He used a single, 15fps internet video for his analysis.
-He matched features and counted pixels, apparently manually, from one frame to the next.
-He scaled based on the 21" shaft size (not the 9" riser size).

Based on his ppt presentation, his method - as I speculated before - bears only superficial resemblance to PIV and really isn't any more sophisticated than any armchair observer could do. There ws no special skill involved in this estimate.

Also, another potential source of error I didn't think of before but can see in his ppt presentation:
10. Buoyancy of oil and gas provides an upward component of velocity immediately after leaving the pipe.
 
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  • #20
Welcome to PF.
.FastEddy. said:
The method does not image single particles nor track the movement of single particles.
Understood, but I would say this is a difference between the typical method of PIV and what Wereley did. He manually identified features and tracked them across frames of video.
 
  • #21
Interestingly, here's what the company he licensed his technology to is saying:
TSI Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) System Used to Spill the Truth on the BP Oil Leak
May 20, 2010-Despite BP's insistence that there is not an effective way of measuring how much oil is actually being leaked into the Gulf of Mexico, many scientists disagree noting a variety of established measurement techniques for such a purpose. Among these scientists is TSI customer Steve Wereley, associate professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University, who recently used TSI’s Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) system to assess the rate at which oil is spewing from the Gulf of Mexico with the help of BP’s own underwater video footage. According to his analysis, the amount of oil escaping from the sea floor is on the order of 70, 000 barrels of oil per day, far exceeding estimates recently released by BP stating the leak was limited to 5,000 gallons per day.

To view BP’s video footage, click here.

To learn more about TSI’s Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) System, click here. [emphasis added]
http://www.tsi.com/en-1033/about_tsi/tsi_news/TSI%20PIV%20Used%20to%20Measure%20BP%20Oil%20Leak.aspx

However, in the link at the bottom, you get this:
TSI PIV systems measure velocity by determining particle displacement over a precisely selected time using a double-pulsed laser technique. A laser light sheet illuminates a plane in the flow... [emphasis added]
Incongruous.
 
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  • #22
To put a fine point on what I'm after here, what I am after is a reputable scientific source that shows that what Wereley did is an accepted method for doing PIV. Something that contains the unique elements of his analysis: not using a laser, not having depth-of-field focused camera, not having a transparent fluid, manually tracking features and counting pixels, etc.
 
  • #23
russ_watters said:
Interestingly, here's what the company he licensed his technology to is saying: However, in the link at the bottom, you get this: Incongruous.

Now THAT is the first EVIDENCE that Wereley and sponsors are being deliberately deceptive. Lucky a peer reviewed team will be making measurements but that will be a while in the offing.

I can only hope that Wereley clarifies this statement; if he does not then many of your accusations would, though it pains me to say it, have merit.
 
  • #24
russ_watters said:
I've found a copy of a ppt presentation Wereley gave on the subject, on the US House website. http://energycommerce.house.gov/documents/20100519/Wereley.Presentation.05.19.2010.pdf [Broken]
Thanks.

My concerns:
o The slide 9 calculations resulting in 72k bbl/day makes it clear he's assuming 100% oil coming from that leak, which is nonsense. IF his calculation is otherwise correct, and NPR's reporter mixture statement of 3:1 gas:eek:il is correct then Wereley's method comes up with 18k bbl/day, and still less if other materials -mud/water - are part of the mix.

o It is not clear to me how he obtains the video pixel scale of 21 inches per 124 pixels (slide 9 top equation). There are only two ways to actual scale the pixel tracks in slide 8: 1) know both the camera focal length and distance from the camera to the measured point, 2) have a reference object of known size in the field of view. This information is undoubtedly known by BP, but there's no indication Wereley makes use of it.
Edit: ok, apparently Wereley is going with #2, using the pixel size of the the 21" pipe as measured in the field of view. I personally can't make out any clear pipe diameter in the film without further description.
 
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  • #25
russ_watters said:
Welcome to PF.
Understood, but I would say this is a difference between the typical method of PIV and what Wereley did. He manually identified features and tracked them across frames of video.

He did, you are looking at slide #7, but he also did the PIV particle cohort analysis - see slide #8.
 
  • #26
russ_watters said:
Also, another potential source of error I didn't think of before but can see in his ppt presentation:
10. Buoyancy of oil and gas provides an upward component of velocity immediately after leaving the pipe.
It might be possible to quantify the velocity component due to buoyancy. Looking at the motion vectors in slide 8, the flow immediately adjacent the pipe leak seems fairly horizontal. Then, unless the flow is deflected by something (I can't tell?), upward motion in the center of the plume is due to buoyancy. I guess the angle is ~40 degrees from horizontal, so the horizontal flow, or leak pressure induced flow rate is cos(40), or 76%. That drops Wereley's 100% pure oil leak estimate from 72k bpd to 54k bpd.
 
  • #27
.FastEddy. said:
...but he also did the PIV particle cohort analysis - see slide #8.
Did he? Or did he just pick 6 points and track them manually and average them? What about that slide indicates to you he used specialized software for this?

Something else I notice from that slide: the velocity vectors get larger as they get further from the pipe. That shouldn't be unless the gas is expanding and causing the mixture to accelerate as it exits the pipe. This would cause a substantial error in his velocity calculation.
 
  • #28
mheslep said:
Edit: ok, apparently Wereley is going with #2, using the pixel size of the the 21" pipe as measured in the field of view. I personally can't make out any clear pipe diameter in the film without further description.
I'm still not clear on the correct size of the pipe. I've heard 21" and 9". Do we have a good indication anywhere on which it really is?
 
  • #29
russ_watters said:
I'm still not clear on the correct size of the pipe. I've heard 21" and 9". Do we have a good indication anywhere on which it really is?
Edit:
Ok, the video I've seen has inserted captions labeling it the riser tube. About the riser, this source says:

Rigzone said:
The rate of flow from the riser is determined in a number of ways and by a number of variables. For instance, while the original riser was 19.5 inches in diameter prior to the Deepwater Horizon accident, damage sustained during the accident distorted the diameter at the end of the pipe by about 30 percent. In addition, a drill pipe currently trapped inside the riser has reduced the flow area by an additional 10 percent. Thus, some third party estimates of flow, which assume a 19.5 inch diameter, are inaccurate.
I assume then mean inner diameter here when discussing flow.

And on composition:
Rigzone said:
As well, there is natural gas in the riser. Data on the hydrocarbons recovered to date suggests that the proportion of gas in the plume exiting the riser is, on average, approximately 50 percent
http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?a_id=93617&hmpn=1
 
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  • #30
russ_watters said:
Did he? Or did he just pick 6 points and track them manually and average them? What about that slide indicates to you he used specialized software for this?

Something else I notice from that slide: the velocity vectors get larger as they get further from the pipe. That shouldn't be unless the gas is expanding and causing the mixture to accelerate as it exits the pipe. This would cause a substantial error in his velocity calculation.

Even if he plugged the numbers into his program, it was not designed to use such loose data. There is no WAY that it could have been modified on the fly that quickly either. Once again, this is very disappointing, but unavoidable as fact.

Presumably the NG expands rapidly, and contributes to bouyancy and acceleration, but while that might spare his velocity calc, it butchers his estimates of the composition of the effluent. I am not buying another estimate until the USCG peer reviewed group is reviewed.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/05/21/gulf.oil.spill/index.html

A federal technical team comprising scientists from the federal government and academia has been charged with estimating the flow rate based on video and other data. The estimate will be peer-reviewed and "given rigorous oversight by the federal government and academia," Landry said.

That estimate is likely to be complete "sometime next week," she said.
 
  • #31
What is the maximum output of the well?

It's been said in numerous places that no well in the gulf produces more than 40 thousand barrels per day. Werely's original estimate gave a range of 56 to 84 thousand barrels. Mind you, the well is far from unobstructed, and he reached that estimate by observing one point of effluence.

Without further calculation, is it safe to assume that his original estimate was quite high?
edit: http://www.theoildrum.com/node/6489#comment-626528 [Broken]

In Congressional testimony BP mentioned a maximum rate of 60,000 bpd but I believe the phrasing of the question (conveniently eliminated by most of the media) was what was the theoretical absolute maximum rate of flow if the well was totally unrestricted - no BOP, no downhole obstructions, etc. I think in later testimony they reduced that to a maximum of 55,000 bpd.

Historically the largest completely open well gushers have all maxed out at about 100,000 bpd and usually dropped off within a few days. The Lakeview gusher (California 1910) was estimated to reach 100,000 bpd, ran unchecked for 18 months, but over that time "only" averaged between 15,000 and 20,000 bpd.

Gulf of Mexico wells have never been capable of delivering the flow rates of the largest onshore wells in the Middle East, Texas or California. The maximum perforated and controlled flow rates have been about 40,000 bpd so it kind of requires a suspension of reality when people outside the industry start talking about flow rates of 70,000 to 100,000 bpd (and higher) through a well that does have restrictions. Even if the well was totally unrestricted, ie: no pressure reduction in the BOP, it is unlikely the well is physically capable of producing over 60,000 bpd.
 
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  • #33
russ_watters said:
I'm still not clear on the correct size of the pipe. I've heard 21" and 9". Do we have a good indication anywhere on which it really is?

Russ,

The riser has an OD of 21". The ID is dependent on the wall thickness. If memory serves me correctly it should be 3/4" walled riser on those slick joints that connect to the riser adapter so the ID would be 19.5".

CS
 
  • #34
russ_watters said:
I've found a copy of a ppt presentation Wereley gave on the subject, on the US House website. http://energycommerce.house.gov/documents/20100519/Wereley.Presentation.05.19.2010.pdf [Broken]

Of note:
-He used a single, 15fps internet video for his analysis.
-He matched features and counted pixels, apparently manually, from one frame to the next.
-He scaled based on the 21" shaft size (not the 9" riser size).

Based on his ppt presentation, his method - as I speculated before - bears only superficial resemblance to PIV and really isn't any more sophisticated than any armchair observer could do. There ws no special skill involved in this estimate.

Also, another potential source of error I didn't think of before but can see in his ppt presentation:
10. Buoyancy of oil and gas provides an upward component of velocity immediately after leaving the pipe.

I agree with you Russ.

Presuming he could actually identify the particles correctly (which I doubt since he has no tracer particles injected) his calc is still wrong due to the wrong diameter of pipe used. The nominal ID is 19.5-in (he used 20-in), however, no one is certain how much actual flow area there is available. If it drops to an effective ID of 3-in then the flow is severely diminished by his own methods to about ~1600 BPD.

CS
 
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  • #35
There are known obstructions inside the pipe, namely some kind of other smaller diameter pipe that ended up there as part of the accident or attempted remedy. Anyway, there's no reason to bother with Wereley any more as the USGS groups released figures (12k to 25k bbl/day) based on several methods (sea floor video, surface inspection, etc) and they're all in rough agreement.
 
<h2>1. What is Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate?</h2><p>Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate is a scientific method used to estimate the amount of oil flowing from a well during an oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. It involves using underwater video footage and advanced computer algorithms to measure the velocity of the oil as it flows out of the well.</p><h2>2. How accurate is the Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate?</h2><p>The accuracy of the Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate depends on several factors, including the quality of the video footage, the precision of the computer algorithms, and the conditions at the spill site. However, studies have shown that this method can provide estimates with an accuracy of within 20% of the actual flow rate.</p><h2>3. Why is Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate important?</h2><p>Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate is important because it provides crucial information for response efforts during an oil spill. Knowing the flow rate allows for better planning and decision-making, as well as monitoring the effectiveness of containment and cleanup efforts.</p><h2>4. How does Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate differ from other methods?</h2><p>Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate is different from other methods, such as satellite imagery and in-situ measurements, because it does not rely on surface observations. Instead, it uses underwater video footage to directly measure the velocity of the oil flow, providing a more accurate estimate of the flow rate.</p><h2>5. Can Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate be used for all oil spills?</h2><p>No, Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate is specifically designed for oil spills in the Gulf of Mexico. The method takes into account the unique conditions of the Gulf, such as the depth and temperature of the water, and may not be applicable to other oil spill scenarios.</p>

1. What is Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate?

Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate is a scientific method used to estimate the amount of oil flowing from a well during an oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. It involves using underwater video footage and advanced computer algorithms to measure the velocity of the oil as it flows out of the well.

2. How accurate is the Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate?

The accuracy of the Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate depends on several factors, including the quality of the video footage, the precision of the computer algorithms, and the conditions at the spill site. However, studies have shown that this method can provide estimates with an accuracy of within 20% of the actual flow rate.

3. Why is Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate important?

Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate is important because it provides crucial information for response efforts during an oil spill. Knowing the flow rate allows for better planning and decision-making, as well as monitoring the effectiveness of containment and cleanup efforts.

4. How does Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate differ from other methods?

Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate is different from other methods, such as satellite imagery and in-situ measurements, because it does not rely on surface observations. Instead, it uses underwater video footage to directly measure the velocity of the oil flow, providing a more accurate estimate of the flow rate.

5. Can Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate be used for all oil spills?

No, Gulf Oil Spill Velocimetry-Based Flow Rate Estimate is specifically designed for oil spills in the Gulf of Mexico. The method takes into account the unique conditions of the Gulf, such as the depth and temperature of the water, and may not be applicable to other oil spill scenarios.

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