Gouging Abrasion Resistance of Materials for Oil Sands Service

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Rees J. Llewellyn
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
10
File Size:
7980 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 2004

Abstract

Improved product development, assessment methods and evaluation studies of materials for oil sands applications have traditionally focused on low and high stress abrasion and slurry erosion resistance mechanisms, because they were considered to be the predominant wear modes prevailing in oil sands mining, transportation and bitumen recovery. More recently with the very successful introduction of oil sands hydraulic transportation systems, there has been increasing use of crusher systems in which materials of construction are also required to have good toughness and gouging abrasion properties to withstand impact and the severe indentation and ploughing forces that are involved. To assess material property requirements for mitigating this additional wear mechanism, jaw crusher gouging abrasion tests using a modified ASTM G81 procedure, have been carried out on a range of wear materials of interest for oil sands mining service. The method involves a comparison of the wear losses that occur for reference and selected test plates when a controlled amount of standard feed rock is comminuted in a laboratory jaw crusher. Among the classes of material evaluated have been Q&T plate steels, austenitic manganese steel, chromium and chromium molybdenum white irons as plain castings and in laminated forms and also chromium carbide and tungsten carbide overlaid wear plates.
Citation

APA: Rees J. Llewellyn  (2004)  Gouging Abrasion Resistance of Materials for Oil Sands Service

MLA: Rees J. Llewellyn Gouging Abrasion Resistance of Materials for Oil Sands Service. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2004.

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