Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology, Vol.45, No.9, 36-45, 2006
The effect of oil sands bitumen extraction conditions on froth treatment performance
Further development of oil sand deposits requires processing poorer quality oil sands while maximizing bitumen recovery, minimizing the water and solids content of the product bitumen, and minimizing overall energy consumption. Bitumen recovery requires two stages: extraction and froth treatment. This work focuses on the effect of process conditions in the Clark Hot Water Bitumen Extraction Process on froth treatment effectiveness. Laboratory approximations are used to represent the two commercialized froth treatment processes in Alberta: 1) the "Syncrude Process," which is dilution with an aromatic solvent followed by centrifugation; and, 2) the "Albian Process," which is dilution with a paraffinic solvent followed by gravity settling. Parameters considered are oil sand quality, extraction shear, extraction temperature, NaOH addition during extraction, froth treatment temperature, and froth treatment residence time. It was found that reduced extraction temperature results in lower bitumen recovery at least for low quality oil sands. Higher shear extraction may improve bitumen recovery, but decreases froth treatment effectiveness. For paraffinic solvent-based froth treatments, the addition of NaOH during extraction may be required to obtain optimum froth treatment of low quality oil sands.