Evaluation of On-Line Particle Size Distribution Measurement for Oil Sands Tailings Treatment

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
D. Schwartz B. Komishke R. Heffel E. Sharifi
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
8
File Size:
390 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2018

Abstract

"The oil sands resources in Canada are one of the world’s largest hydrocarbon deposits. Processing of oil sands uses hot water to extract bitumen. The process generates tailings slurry that must be settled for final deposition. The tailings contain fine material, with poor water release characteristics which makes water recovery challenging. Polymer flocculants are added to assist in settling and dewatering the fine tailings. The amount of polymer addition is dependent on tailings characteristics, including the particle size distribution (PSD). If the PSD of the tailings is unknown, an excess amount of polymer needs to be added in the dewatering stage to flocculate the particles. Over flocculation also has a detrimental effect on the water release characteristics. Measuring the particle size distribution using an on-line analyzer could have major benefits over common laboratory methods as it provides online and fast insight into the process enabling the operators to implement required changes to minimize the reagent consumption, while achieving optimal flocculation. Online measurement of PSD using laser diffraction has long been used in base metals beneficiation processes. A series of test work using Outotec PSI500® particle size analyzer on oil sands samples from different operations have been conducted. Tests were performed by recirculating the slurry in closed circuit to simulate real plant conditions. This paper presents a summary of the results.INTRODUCTION Canada’s oil sands are the third largest reserves of crude oil in the world, with an estimated 165.4 billion barrels of recoverable oil (Government of Alberta 2016). Oil sands are a mixture of sand, water, clay and bitumen. Bitumen is a form of oil that is too heavy or thick to flow or be pumped without being diluted or heated. About 20% of bitumen reserves are close enough to surface to be mined. In mining methods, oil sand is transported from an open pit mine to the processing plant and bitumen is separated from solids and water. The separation process involves ore preparation, such as addition of hot water, steam and caustic (NaOH), followed by gravity separation and froth treatment (Masliyah et al. 2004). A general scheme of the extraction process is presented in Figure 1."
Citation

APA: D. Schwartz B. Komishke R. Heffel E. Sharifi  (2018)  Evaluation of On-Line Particle Size Distribution Measurement for Oil Sands Tailings Treatment

MLA: D. Schwartz B. Komishke R. Heffel E. Sharifi Evaluation of On-Line Particle Size Distribution Measurement for Oil Sands Tailings Treatment. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2018.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account