Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering, Vol.79, No.3, 468-470, 2001
An investigation of the effect of air addition during oil sand conditioning
Bitumen aeration was studied by flooding samples of medium grade oil sand with de-ionized water under both ambient and high vacuum conditions. The samples were then agitated on a shaker table. Subsequent analysis revealed the presence or absence of an air gap in the sample container was the single most important factor in determining the overall bitumen recovery. Furthermore, samples that were flooded while under high vacuum produced slightly less bitumen compared to samples flooded at atmospheric pressure. This suggests that oil sand that is not under high vacuum when flooded with water contains some amount of indigenous air (see introduction) that would aid in bitumen flotation.