Talk:Pore pressure gradient

Latest comment: 9 years ago by Vaeddich

I am an electrical engineer, and I still found this article confusing in its inconsistent use of units and terminology, so I added a simple example to clarify what I think is being said. If I got it wrong, I welcome anyone with better knowledge to correct the example. --Dave (talk) 15:41, 2 June 2010 (UTC)Reply


Hi, I am a mechanical engineer, and I think that something this definition of the pore pressure gradient is wrong! A gradient is a vector. In this case it has to be a pressure related to a depth. But lb/gal is a mass related to a depth, which is a density. It is wrong that this both units are equal, like the equation is showing. I think the mistake is that psi is equal to pound-force per square inch an not to pound per square inch. But what you have to keep in mind is that if one converts a lb (or lbm) in force (lbf) it ist the same value, because F=1lbm*(1slug/32.2lbm)*(32.2ft/s²)=1lbf --Vaeddich (talk) 11:14, 4 November 2014 (UTC)Reply


I am a petroleum geologist and normally in petroleum geoscience circles Pore Pressure Gradient (PPG) is in units of PSI/FT in the United States. "Normal" pressure is 0.433 psi per foot of depth in a well. As noted above this is a measurement relative to depth, so is in fact a gradient. The value 0.433 psi/ft assumes fresh water which is almost always incorrect below about 1000-2000 feet (think drinking water aquifers). Below aquifers ground water typically becomes increasingly salty and in many cases much saltier than seawater. So "normal" is really just a rule of thumb. I typically use 0.44 psi/ft for typical well depths. Mud engineers will use numbers in terms of pounds per gallon as noted above for the weight of the drilling mud and this is not a gradient. Obviously higher weight mud is needed at higher pressure which is normally associated with deeper depths. So mud engineers will often have a calculation derived about how many pounds per gallon the mud needs to be at a given depth or over a given formation. Rarely, formations at depth will be "Under pressured" which means that the weight of mud needed to contain an hydrocarbon in a given well bore is lower than hydro-static pressure, 0.44 psi/ft.