Search
Skip to Search Results- 2Kresta, Suzanne
- 2Martinez Tobon, Diana Isabel
- 1Abdalrhman, Abdallatif S A
- 1Adebusuyi, Abigail A
- 1Afshar, Shima
- 1Alberta Environmental Centre
- 77Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 77Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 4WISEST Summer Research Program
- 4WISEST Summer Research Program/WISEST Research Posters
- 2Oil Sands Research and Information Network (OSRIN)
- 1Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science, Department of
- 40Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering
- 15Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
- 4Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
- 3Department of Mechanical Engineering
- 3Department of Physics
- 2Department of Chemistry
- 5Xu, Zhenghe (Chemical and Materials Engineering)
- 4De Klerk, Arno (Chemical and Materials Engineering)
- 2Anastasia Elias (Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering)
- 2Dominic Sauvageau (Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering)
- 2Guigard, Selma (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering)
- 2Liu, Qi (Chemical and Materials Engineering)
-
Fall 2009
The extraction of bitumen (heavy oil) from the oil sands is predominantly achieved through a water-based technology. This involves a slurrying process, typically called conditioning, which is categorized into three equally important steps: bitumen-sand liberation, bitumen coalescence, and...
-
Spring 2014
In bitumen recovery from oil sands, a percentage of the bitumen is lost to tailings. The effect of fugitive bitumen on fines settling and consolidation in tailings ponds remains controversial. In the current study, the settling performance of mature fine tailings (MFT) in response to flocculant...
-
Spring 2017
The formation of stable water-in-oil emulsions during oil sands extraction process causes a number of operational issues, such as equipment corrosion, storage and transportation problems. One common method for emulsion breakup in industry is to use chemical demulsifiers. The chemical demulsifiers...
-
Spring 2011
Extraction of hydrocarbons from an Athabasca oil sand slurry were conducted using supercritical carbon dioxide (SC-CO2). The oil sand was slurried to a 1:1 ratio with water and experiments were conducted using a laboratory-scale batch supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) system. Preliminary tests...
-
Extraction of Hydrocarbons from Bitumen and Bitumen-containing Process and Process Waste Streams using Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
DownloadSpring 2019
Extractions of hydrocarbons from bitumen and bitumen-containing process and process waste streams generated from surface mined oil sands were conducted using supercritical carbon dioxide (SC-CO2). Dynamic extractions were performed on a bench-scale batch supercritical fluid extraction (SFE)...
-
Heavy Oil/Bitumen Recovery by Alternate Injection of Steam and Solvent (Hydrocarbon and CO2) in Fractured Carbonates and Oilsands
DownloadFall 2013
The world energy demand is constantly increasing and fossil fuels are still by far the main energy resource that supplies the world energy consumption market, therefore increasing oil recovery from all types of reservoirs is an important matter. The burning of fossil fuels for energy purposes, on...
-
High-Float Emulsion Residue: A New Rheological Model Based on the Existence of a Yield Stress
DownloadFall 2016
“High-float” (HF) emulsions are dispersions of micron-sized bitumen droplets in water, with a special type of anionic surfactant functioning as stabilizer. By allowing the water to evaporate from an HF emulsion, what remains is called a “high-float emulsion residue.” Although indistinguishable in...
-
Fall 2015
The rheological properties of heavy oil and bitumen depend on factors such as temperature, pressure, diluent type and diluent composition, as well as sample shear and thermal histories and shear conditions during measurements. Each of these factors can affect the value of apparent viscosity...