Abstract

The extraction of bitumen from the oilsands using solvents has the potential to avoid the environmental problems with wet tailings associated with water-based extraction technology. One of the key performance parameters for this technology is the concentration of fine solids in the recovered bitumen. In this study, the concentration and properties of the fine solids in cyclohexane-extracted bitumen were examined as a function of the water content of the ore. Total water contents from 3.4–13.4 wt % gave the lowest concentrations of fine solids in the bitumen, ca. 0.2 wt % of the initial mass of a low-fines content ore. Higher fine solids contents in the bitumen were observed with water concentrations outside this range and with higher concentrations of fine solids in the initial oilsands ore. The fine solids exhibited a distribution of surface properties, and the most hydrophobic, carbon rich solids were carried into the bitumen even under the most favorable conditions. When the bitumen was more contaminat...

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