Water-mediated adhesion of oil sands on solid surfaces at low temperature
October 01, 2021
Qimeng Yang (1), Jae Bem You (2), Boran Tian (3), Shaofeng Sun (3), Dan Daniel (4), Qi Liu (1), Xuehua Zhang (1)
ChemXriv, October 2021. DOI: 10.26434/chemrxiv-2021-f1zvq
Keywords
Oil sands; Adhesion strength; Water content; Temperature; Granular matrix
Abstract
Adhesion of frozen granular materials on solid surfaces creates various problems for surface cleaning, reduces the carrying capacity of vehicles, and increases energy consumption for in-land transportation. Here we report that water content determines the adhesion strength of oil sands on solid surfaces at temperature of -2.5 â—¦C to -20 â—¦C. Our measurements by X-ray micro-computed tomography revealed that water forms capillary bridges between the sand particles and the solid substrate and more air gaps at the interface between oil sands and the substrate are filled with interstitial water at a higher content. We experimentally measured the minimal force required to push the frozen oil sands off the substrate and identified that the adhesion strength increased linearly with water content from 4% to 14% on both rubber and steel substrate. For short freezing time at a fixed water content, lowering the temperature increased the adhesion strength on the steel substrate. Fouling from a layer of bitumen or asphaltenes aggravated the adhesion of oil sands on steel. A theoretical model was proposed to rationalize the linear relationship between water content and the adhesion strength, based on the contact area between ice and the substrate. We also found an effective method to reduce the adhesion of oil sands by spraying a little amount of anti-freezing liquid on the substrate. Our approach may reduce the energy consumption in transport and processing of wet granular materials, and potentially save manpower and the cost from cleaning in industrial operations. The insight from our work may have wide applicability to many natural/industrial processes, such as soil formation, food processing, and porous structures in ice crystal-templating nanomaterials synthesis by freezing-drying.
How Our Software Was Used
Dragonfly was used to analyze the microstructure of oil sand samples in the solid/liquid/air phase and the volume fraction of those phases.
Author Affiliation
(1) Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Alberta, Alberta T6G 1H9, Canada.
(2) Department of Chemical Engineering, Kyungpook National University, Daegu 41566, Republic of Korea.
(3) Imperial Oil, Calgary, Alberta T2C 4P3, Canada.
(4) Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (IMRE), Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), Singapore 138634, Singapore.