Undergraduate Courses - Dr. Alireza Nouri

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Undergraduate Courses

Teaching

I have been extensively engaged in classroom teaching at both undergraduate and graduate levels. I have taught 11 different courses over the last seven years. These courses have been in traditional petroleum engineering areas (e.g., Reservoir and Production Engineering, Petroleum Fluid Properties), civil engineering (Mechanics of Deformable Bodies), and interdisciplinary subjects (e.g., Wellbore Geomechanics).
PET E 275: Petroleum Reservoir Fluids
It is critical to be able to accurately predict the properties of reservoir fluids in all areas of petroleum engineering. Substantial progress in our understanding of the physical properties of fluid has occurred during the last few decades. In this class, we explore these properties and fluid phase behavior through algebraic and numerical applications of thermodynamic theory, equations of state and empirical correlations.
Course Contents

PET E 366: Petroleum Production Operations
Petroleum production is the phase that occurs after successful exploration and development and during which hydrocarbons are drained from an oil or gas field. The producing fluid must travel through the reservoir and the tubing and piping system and ultimately flow into a separator for gas-oil-water separation. The driving force behind the flowing fluid is the pressure drop in the system from the reservoir pressure to the separator pressure. Every individual component on the way of the flowing fluid induces certain amount of pressure drop. As such, production rate will adjust itself so that the sum of all the pressure drops equals the total pressure drop. As the characteristics of the individual components have a significant effect on the level of the drop they induce on the flowing fluid pressure and since the performance of each component in the system impacts the performance of all other components, they must be optimally designed in a cost effective manner. The subject of production engineering is to optimize the flow systems from the bottomhole location to the surface production facilities to improve well productivity in a cost effective manner.
Course Content
PET E 373: Fundamental Reservoir Engineering
It is expected that at the end of the course students will be familiar with techniques of estimating oil and gas reserves and recovery, as well as techniques for the determination of formation properties. The course will provide necessary engineering background in performing reservoir evaluation.
Course Contents
Miscellaneous Courses taught:
PET E 475: Applied Reservoir Engineering
Course Outline
CIV E 270: Mechanics of Deformable Bodies
PET E 488: Petroleum Field Trip
PET E 489: Petroleum Engineering Seminar

 
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