RI 4871 Separation And Utilization Studies Of Bitumens From Bituminous Sandstones Of The Vernal And Sunnyside, Utah, Deposits - Part I. & Part II.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
G. B. Shea
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
32
File Size:
9680 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1952

Abstract

In the search for possible future sources of petroleum products, the recovery and utilization of bitumens from the large outcropping deposits of bituminous sandstones in the United States have been under study by the Bureau of Mines for the past several years. The results of laboratory research in the adaptation of the hot-water separation process to recovery of bitumen from bituminous sandstones were reported in an earlier publication, on the Edna deposits near San Luis Obispo, Calif. This publication included analytical data on the cracked products and asphalts obtained from the extracted bitumen and on the cracking and distillation of the bitumen. Comparable hot-water separation tests have been run in the San Francisco, Calif., laboratory of the Bureau of Mines on quarry samples from the large deposits of bituminous sandstones near Vernal and Sunnyside, Utah. The bitumens were isolated from the extracts of the separation plant and analyzed at the Petroleum and Oil-Shale Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines, Laramie, Wyo. Part I of this report summarizes the general characteristics of the Vernal and Sunnyside deposits and discusses the hot-water separation process as applied to those bituminous sandstones and the results obtained. The separation tests showed that these bituminous sandstones also respond to treatment by the hotwater method of separation. The bitumen in the Vernal sandstone was extracted more readily by the action of hot water than was the Edna bitumen, which greatly simplified plant operation. The Vernal sandstone contains no water-soluble iron compounds, such as were found in the Edna sandstone, and, therefore, required no preliminary water washing. Recovery of bitumen from the Vernal sandstone was about 96 percent.
Citation

APA: G. B. Shea  (1952)  RI 4871 Separation And Utilization Studies Of Bitumens From Bituminous Sandstones Of The Vernal And Sunnyside, Utah, Deposits - Part I. & Part II.

MLA: G. B. Shea RI 4871 Separation And Utilization Studies Of Bitumens From Bituminous Sandstones Of The Vernal And Sunnyside, Utah, Deposits - Part I. & Part II.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1952.

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