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B. Vocabulary PracticeDate: 2015-10-07; view: 557. A. Comprehension Answer the questions: 1) What is natural gas? Give its short definition . 2) What is the typical composition of natural gas? 3) How can natural gas liquids be separated from natural gas? 4) Explain the difference between the terms ‘dry' and ‘wet' gas? 5) Name the main physical properties of natural gas. 6) Why is natural gas odorized by adding thiols? 7) Is natural gas a poison? Can it kill? 8) How can natural gas be measured? Name the main ways. 9) How can natural gas be used? 10) What do production companies do after they extract natural gas from underground? I. Give English equivalents for: 1) âñòðå÷àþùàÿñÿ â ïðèðîäå ñìåñü óãëåâîäîðîäíûõ è íåóãëåâîäîðîäíûõ ãàçîâ; 2) ëåãêîâîñïëàìåíÿþùàÿñÿ ñìåñü; 3) âûäåëÿòü áîëüøîå êîëè÷åñòâî òåïëà ïðè ãîðåíèè; 4) ñæèæàòüñÿ íà ïîâåðõíîñòè; 5) ïëàñòîâàÿ âîäà; 6) ÷àñòè÷íî êîíäåíñèðîâàòüñÿ ïðè òðàíñïîðòèðîâêå; 7) ãàç, äîáûòûé èç ñêâàæèíû; 8) èìåòü îò÷åòëèâûé ïðîíèêàþùèé çàïàõ; 9) ïîìîãàòü â îáíàðóæåíèè óòå÷êè; 10) áûòü ëåã÷å âîçäóõà; 11) èìåòü òåíäåíöèþ ðàññåèâàòüñÿ â àòìîñôåðó; 12) áûòü îãðàíè÷åííûì â ñâî¸ì ðàñïðîñòðàíåíèè; 13) ÿâëÿòüñÿ óäóøàþùèì îòðàâëÿþùèì âåùåñòâîì; 14) îáúåì, çàíèìàåìûé ïðèðîäíûì ãàçîì ïðè íîðìàëüíîé òåìïåðàòóðå è äàâëåíèè; 15) èçìåðÿòü ïðèðîäíûé ãàç â êóáè÷åñêèõ ôóòàõ; 16) áðèòàíñêàÿ òåïëîâàÿ åäèíèöà; 17) ïîñòîÿííî íóæäàòüñÿ â ýíåðãèè; 18) áûòîâîå, êîììåð÷åñêîå è ïðîìûøëåííîå èñïîëüçîâàíèå ïðèðîäíîãî ãàçà; 19) áûòü òåñíî ñâÿçàííûì ñ ìåñòîðîæäåíèåì íåôòè; 20) èñïîëüçîâàòü ñëîæíûå òåõíîëîãèè äëÿ òîãî, ÷òîáû îáíàðóæèòü ìåñòîíàõîæäåíèå ïðèðîäíîãî ãàçà; 21) áóðèòü ñêâàæèíû òàì, ãäå åñòü âåðîÿòíîñòü îáíàðóæèòü ïðèðîäíûé ãàç; 22) î÷èùàòü ïðèðîäíûé ãàç äëÿ òîãî, ÷òîáû îñâîáîäèòü åãî îò òàêèõ ïðèìåñåé êàê âîäà, ïåñîê è äðóãèå ãàçû; 23) òðàíñïîðòèðîâàòü ïî ãàçîïðîâîäó; 24) òèïè÷íûé ñîñòàâ ïðèðîäíîãî ãàçà äî ïåðåðàáîòêè; 25) ïðàêòè÷åñêè ÷èñòûé ìåòàí.
II. Give Russian equivalents for: to be clean burning; 2) to emit lower levels of potentially harmful byproducts into the air; 3) combustible mixture of hydrocarbon gases; 4) to be formed primarily of methane; 5) to include ethane, propane, butane and pentane; 6) to be gaseous under atmospheric conditions; 7) to liquefy at the surface at atmospheric pressure; 8) natural gas liquids/ gas condensate/ natural gasoline/ liquefied petroleum gas; 9) to separate in some reservoirs through retrograde condensation; 10) to occur in association with the hydrocarbon gases; 11) formation water 12) to occur together in the reservoir 13) to contain water vapour 14) typical make up of natural gas before it is refined;15) to be considered 'dry' or 'wet' 16) colour, odour, and flammability 17) to impart a decided odour; 18) to be odorized by adding thiols; 19) harmless to the human body; 20) to be a simple asphyxiant; 21) lower explosive limit \upper explosive limit; 22) to be calculated in cubic metres; 23) to be measured as a source of energy; 24) to remove impurities; 25) to be transmitted through a network of pipeline III. Fill in the appropriate word(s) from the list below into the extracts and translate them into Russian:
à) methane, to form, breakdown, proximity, heavier hydrocarbons, paraffin, hydrocarbon gases, mantle, bacterial, oxidation, decay. Hydrocarbon gases … are largely composed of the … series - straight and branched, single bonded changes of hydrocarbons. (1) … is the largest constituent of natural gas. It can … in three ways: (a) Mantle methane. Derived from the … (presumably primordial methane). (b) Microbial methane. As a reaction product of the bacterial … of organic matter. Large caused by the reduction of CO2 during … of the organic matter. (c) Thermogenic methane. Thermal … of heavier hydrocarbons. (2) Heavier hydrocarbons: Rarely (perhaps never) formed by … processes. Thus the presence of … in natural gas probably reflects … to liquid hydrocarbon reservoir.
b) formation, continuation, chemical, temperature, atmospheric, asphyxiation, be actively produced, warning, deadliest, oceanic, to dull, ppt, radioactive, compounds, thermal, maturation, to originate, depth, paralysis, decomposition, inert, numerous, mobile, reactive, crust, to form
Non-hydrocarbon gases Noble Gases - Helium, Argon, and Radon These gases are … - do not take part in … reactions. They … from decay of … isotopes of various elements, predominately the U series elements. Nitrogen Three potential origins of nitrogen: (1) through oxidation of NH4, which is derived from … breakdown of organic matter. (2) … origin (atmosphere is 70% nitrogen). (3) Mantle out gassing - … of the out gassing that started soon after the … of the earth. Hydrogen Hydrogen is so … and …, it cannot be permanently retained in the subsurface. It must … with in reservoir, adjacent source beds, or diffusing upward from .… Possible origins include: (1) from reactions in the … that involve Ferrous iron reduction, and (2) during thermal … of organic matter. Carbon dioxide CO2 has erratic distribution in the subsurface because of … sources and variations in solubility. Sources: two organic and one inorganic a) Thermal degradation of organic matter. Largely from the … of oxygen bearing groups in organic matter. Usually derived from continentally derived organic matter. b) Inorganic clay reactions - largely from reaction between carbonates and kaolinite … chlorite. c) Volcanic activity. Decomposition of carbonate rocks during injection of high … magmas and by acidic water. Hydrogen sulfide The … gas produced in large quantities. 1 … causes respiratory … and sudden but agonizing death from … . Can't rely on foul odor as … - at concentrations below 0.1 ppt, H2S … sense of smell, increasing concentrations won't be noticed. Origin: a) Inorganic cracking of sulfur bearing organic … - generally found at temperatures > 120°C b) Reduction of sulfate - perhaps the greatest source of sulfate, particularly in … sediments.
c) underground, to decay, fossil fuel, petroleum, methane , to be confused, remains, nonrenewable, hydrocarbon, escaping, electricity, odorant, nonhydrocarbons, safety, materials, by-products, gas, to undergo, raw Natural gas is generally considered a … fossil fuel. Natural gas is called a ... because most scientists believe that natural gas was formed from the ... of tiny sea animals and plants that died 200-400 million years ago. … natural gas is a mixture of … compounds and small quantities of various … existing in the gaseous phase or in solution with crude oil in natural … reservoirs at reservoir conditions. Its main ingredient is …,a natural compound that is formed whenever plant and animal matter … . By itself, methane is odorless, colorless, and tasteless. As a … measure, natural gas companies add a chemical … (it smells like rotten eggs) so … gas can be detected. Natural gas is often informally referred to as simply …, especially when compared to other energy sources such as … . Before natural gas can be used as a fuel, it must … extensive processing to remove almost all … other than methane. The … of that processing include ethane, propane, butanes, pentanes and higher molecular weight hydrocarbons, elemental sulfur, and sometimes helium and nitrogen. Natural gas should not … with gasoline, which is made from … .
d) Natural, air, flammable, level, to reach, combustion, presence, smell, to be expressed, flame. Natural gas will not explode in the … of a flame until it … a very specific concentration in the air - below a certain … it is deemed too lean to burn and above a certain level it may be too rich to burn. Within a … range, the gas will ignite and may cause an explosion. The flammable range … by Lower Explosive Limit ("LEL") and Upper Explosive Limit ("UEL"). The LEL is the concentration of natural gas in the … below which the propagation of a … will not occur on contact with an ignition source. The natural gas LEL is 5%. This means that, in most cases, the … of gas would be detected well before … conditions are met. The UEL is the concentration of natural gas in the air above which the propagation of a flame will not occur on contact with an ignition source. The … gas UEL is 15%.
IV. Match the following terms with their definitions and give their Russian equivalents: retrograde condensation, natural gas, fossil fuel, cubic feet, methane, British thermal unit, liquefied natural gas, natural gas liquids.
1. The lightest and most abundant of the hydrocarbon gases and the principal component of natural gas. It is a colorless, odorless gas that is stable under a wide range of pressure and temperature conditions in the absence of other compounds. 2. The formation of liquid hydrocarbons in a gas reservoir as the pressure in the reservoir decreases below dew point pressure during production. It is called this way because some of the gas condenses into a liquid under isothermal conditions instead of expanding or vaporizing when pressure is decreased. 3. A naturally occurring mixture of hydrocarbon gases that is highly compressible and expansible. Methane (CH4) is the chief constituent of it. 4. Any naturally occurring carbon or hydrocarbon fuel, such as coal, petroleum, peat, and natural gas, formed by the decomposition of prehistoric organisms. 5. Natural gas, mainly methane and ethane, which has been liquefied at cryogenic temperatures. This process occurs at an extremely low temperature and a pressure near the atmospheric pressure. 6. Components of natural gas that are liquid at surface in field facilities or in gas-processing plants. 7. A measure of heat energy required to raise the temperature of one pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit. 8. A common measure for gas volume. Standard conditions are normally set at 60oF and 14.7 pounds per square inch.
V. Explain the following terms using a specialized dictionary and glossary, give their Russian equivalents and make up your own sentences with them: condensation, ‘dry' gas, ‘wet' gas, non-hydrocarbon gases
VI. Give English translation for: Ñâîéñòâà è ïîëüçà ïðèðîäíîãî ãàçà
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