Probing Mineral-Bitumen Liberation Through Rheological Measurements

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
L. Gutierrez M. Pawlik
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
12
File Size:
844 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2009

Abstract

The rheology artificial mixtures of bitumen with fine quartz of varying bitumen content, as well as actual oil sand ores, was investigated under different physicochemical conditions (pH, temperature). All rheological measurements were conducted using a Haake Rotovisco VT550 rotational viscometer, connected to a fixture specifically designed to measure properties of settling suspensions. It was found that at low bitumen contents (1 %, wt.) the pH of the slurries was the most important parameter that controlled the rheology of quartz-bitumen slurries. At higher bitumen contents (10%, wt.), it was a combination of high temperature and high pH that gave the lowest apparent viscosities and yield stresses of the model mixtures. These model observations correlated well with the rheology data obtained for slurries of actual oil sand ores. The overall results were discussed in terms of aggregation-dispersion phenomena between bitumen and mineral particles.
Citation

APA: L. Gutierrez M. Pawlik  (2009)  Probing Mineral-Bitumen Liberation Through Rheological Measurements

MLA: L. Gutierrez M. Pawlik Probing Mineral-Bitumen Liberation Through Rheological Measurements. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2009.

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