Jet pump system for forming an aqueous oil sand slurry

Conveyors: fluid current – Intake to fluid current conveyor – Load receptacle type

Reexamination Certificate

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C406S106000, C406S141000, C406S144000, C406S146000, C241S160000, C241S018000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06821060

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a process and apparatus for mixing oil sand with water and air to produce a slurry suitable for pumping and pipelining.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The surface-minable oil sands in the Fort McMurray region of Northern Alberta have now been commercially exploited for about 30 years.
Initially, the as-mined oil sand was deposited on conveyor belts and transported to a facility known as an extraction plant. Here the oil sand was crushed, screened to remove oversize and then introduced into a large, horizontal, rotating drum (referred to as a ‘tumbler’), together with hot water (95° C.), a process aid (NaOH) and steam. The tumbler had internal lifters which would lift and cascade the mixture as it advanced lengthwise through the tumbler chamber. A thick hot slurry containing entrained air bubbles would be formed.
During residence in the tumbler:
lumps of oil sand would be fragmented and would disintegrate;
a bitumen would separate from the sand and enter the water phase of the slurry as small flecks; and
some bitumen flecks would coalesce and attach to air bubbles.
The sum of these actions is referred to in the industry as ‘conditioning’.
The resulting conditioned slurry would then be diluted with additional hot water and would be introduced into a large, open-topped, cylindrical flotation vessel having a conical bottom. This vessel is known as the primary separation vessel or ‘PSV’. In the PSV, the sand would settle under the influence of gravity, be concentrated in the cone and leave as an underflow stream of wet tailings. The aerated bitumen would rise and be recovered as an overflow stream of froth. A watery mixture called ‘middlings’ would be withdrawn from the mid-section of the PSV and would be further processed to recover residual bitumen.
As the mining areas got further from the extraction plant, a new system was implemented. The as-mined oil sand was crushed and mixed with hot water at the mine site. The produced slurry, containing entrained air, was then pumped through a pipeline. It had been discovered that the slurry would ‘condition’ suitably, if given adequate retention time, as it moved through the pipeline. It could then be fed directly to the PSV. The degree of bitumen recovery in the PSV was found to be sufficient to be viable.
In connection with this new ‘at the mine site’ system, it was necessary to develop means for forming a pumpable, pipelineable slurry from the dry as-mined oil sand, which comprises large frozen lumps, rocks and the like.
At applicants' facility, two distinct slurry preparation systems were sequentially developed and installed on a commercial basis.
The first slurry preparation system was disclosed in our U.S. Pat. No. 5,039,227. This system involved a vertical tower arrangement comprising:
an open-topped cylindrical vessel (called a ‘cyclofeeder’), having a conical bottom and central bottom outlet, for forming slurry;
a set of vibrating screens which were positioned beneath the bottom outlet and which were adapted to reject +2 inch material from the slurry;
a tall pump box positioned beneath the screens for receiving the screened slurry; and
a pump for pumping slurry from the pump box into a pipeline.
The as-mined oil sand would first be crushed to −24 inches. The crushed oil sand and added water would then be poured into the cyclofeeder chamber, where they would add to a rotating vortex of slurry recycled from the pump box and pumped tangentially into the vessel chamber. Air would be entrained in the vortex. The resulting slurry dropped onto the screens. The rejected oversize material was dumped on the ground or was conveyed to another crusher and subjected to a repetition of the same process. The wet-screened slurry was collected in the pump box, ready for pumping down the pipeline, and a portion was pumped back to the cyclofeeder to form the vortex.
The second slurry preparation system was disclosed in our U.S. Pat. No. 5,772,127. It too was a vertical tower arrangement it involved:
a downwardly descending zig-zag arrangement of troughs into which oil sand and water would be poured, to mix and form a slurry containing entrained air;
a set of screens for separating +4 inch oversize from the slurry;
an impactor for breaking up some of the screen reject material;
a screen for screening the impactor product to produce oversize rejects and underflow;
a tall pump box positioned to receive the wet-screened slurry and the impactor underflow; and
a pump for pumping slurry from the pump box into a pipeline.
The as-mined oil sand was crushed to −24 inches. The crushed oil sand and water were fed into the trough, where they mixed and formed the slurry. Air would concurrently be entrained in the slurry. The slurry was wet-screened to reject +4 inch material. The screen reject was impacted and then screened. The impactor product was directed into the pump box. The impactor reject was dumped onto the ground.
The second slurry preparation system was better than the first in that the amount of reject (and the oil lost with it) was significantly reduced.
The two slurry preparation systems had certain problematic characteristics, namely:
they were massive and essentially non-movable (the first system was 34 meters tall, the second was 32 meters tall):
they both dumped rejects on the ground—these rejects had to be continually removed with loaders and trucks, to make room for new reject material and to suitably dispose of the removed material; and
due to their immobility, the system could not follow the mining shovels and therefore the cost of trucking the as-mined oil sand from the shovel to the slurry preparation tower increased steadily as the shovels moved further away.
There has therefore existed a long-standing need to provide a re-locatable, smaller, lighter, simpler slurry preparation system. It is the objective of this invention to provide such a system.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with the invention, as-mined oil sand is first crushed to a pumpable size. This is preferably done using a sequentially arranged pair of double roll crushers operative to crush the as-mined oil sand in stages, to a final size of about −5 inches or less. The entire stream of pre-crushed oil sand is then fed into a mass flow hopper. The hopper is connected to a conventional jet pump and feeds the oil sand into its fluidization chamber.
The jet pump comprises:
a body forming the fluidization chamber;
a main nozzle, connected to a source of pressurized motive fluid, the nozzle being operative to deliver a jet of fluid from one end of the fluidization chamber;
a tubular mixer, aligned in spaced downstream relationship to the main nozzle, so as to receive the jet into its inlet end, the mixer extending through the other end of the body;
optionally, one or more dilution nozzles, also connected to a source of pressurized motive fluid, are positioned in the fluidization chamber. The dilution nozzles are operative to inject jets of motive fluid to assist in fluidizing oil sand entering the chamber from the hopper; and
a slurry line, connected to the outlet end of the mixer, for conveying away produced slurry.
In operation, the motive fluid jet from the main nozzle extends through the open space in the fluidization chamber, between it and the mixer, and enters the bore of the mixer. In the course of doing so, it entrains oil sand entering from the hopper. The dilution nozzles emit fluid jets which help to fluidize the oil sand entering the chamber. The motive fluid and oil sand mix as they move through the bore of the mixer. Lumps are disintegrated. Entrained air contacts and aerates bitumen. These actions continue in the downstream slurry line.
Surprisingly, our testing indicates that the lumps of oil sand have been largely or entirely disintegrated by the time the product slurry leaves the jet pump. We believe that the combination of acceleration, shear, mixing and heat inputs cause this remarkable and almost instantaneous disintegration. The jet pump produces a slurry that

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