Abstract

The reclamation of land and recovery of water from tailing ponds created during bitumen extraction from oil sands is a major technical and environmental challenge. In the current study, thermoresponsive hydroxybutylated (HB) corn starch (HB-CS) and potato starch (HB-PS), with lower critical solution temperatures (LCSTs) ranging from 36 to 45 °C, were examined as flocculants for oil sands mature fine tailings (MFT). The ability of different doses of the HB-CS and HB-PS to flocculate 2 and 10 wt % MFT, prepared by diluting 35 wt % MFT in tap water, in terms of the initial settling rate (ISR), supernatant turbidity (ST), sediment solids content (SSC), and water recovery (WR), was examined at temperatures below and above their LCSTs. The thermoresponsive HB-CS and HB-PS were good flocculants of MFT, and their thermoresponsive behavior was essential for optimal results in that they were considerably more effective in several aspects at temperatures above their LCSTs than below. In terms of ISRs, the HB-PS was a considerably better flocculant than the HB-CS, and this was especially so with the 10 wt % MFT. With the HB-PS, the ISR was lower when using diluted MFT prepared with tap water as opposed to simulated oil sands process water.

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