Frozen Lump Generation of Oil Sands ? Climatic Challenges and Solutions

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Derek J. Cyr
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
8
File Size:
473 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 2004

Abstract

Climate has an immense impact on the properties of Athabasca oil sands and the ease or difficulty with which it is excavated and extracted. During the winter months, exposed oil sands surfaces freeze. When hydraulic and electric shovels used in the various operations in the Fort McMurray area excavate the benches, large frozen lumps are created. These lumps are either destined for a lump dump where increased costs are incurred due to rehandle, or they are sent to the primary crushers where they can cause significant downtimes by jamming the crusher. The crusher down time can sometimes be in the order of hours of lost production. Studies on data from two consecutive winters at Syncrude Canada?s North Mine show a high correlation between climate and the generation of frozen oil sands lumps. Temperature, ground cover, traffic, bench exposure time, oil sands grade and moisture content all contribute to this problem. A 1D frost penetration model was used to predict the depth of frost expected in oil sands and the corresponding likelihood of frozen oil sands lumps. To combat the challenge of frozen lump generation, a number of proactive and reactive measures can be taken: artificial snow, shallow ponds, scheduling, blasting or ripping.
Citation

APA: Derek J. Cyr  (2004)  Frozen Lump Generation of Oil Sands ? Climatic Challenges and Solutions

MLA: Derek J. Cyr Frozen Lump Generation of Oil Sands ? Climatic Challenges and Solutions. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2004.

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