Aging of Water from Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) Operations Due to Air Exposure and Effects on Ceramic Membrane Filtration

The performance of first generation steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) plants for bitumen recovery has improved through operational experience, but there remain ample opportunities for the introduction of technologies that can further improve energy efficiency and plant reliability. Laboratory t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Industrial & engineering chemistry research 2012-05, Vol.51 (21), p.7170-7176
Hauptverfasser: Ku, Anthony Y, Henderson, Claire S, Petersen, Matthew A, Pernitsky, David J, Sun, Annie Q
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container_end_page 7176
container_issue 21
container_start_page 7170
container_title Industrial & engineering chemistry research
container_volume 51
creator Ku, Anthony Y
Henderson, Claire S
Petersen, Matthew A
Pernitsky, David J
Sun, Annie Q
description The performance of first generation steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) plants for bitumen recovery has improved through operational experience, but there remain ample opportunities for the introduction of technologies that can further improve energy efficiency and plant reliability. Laboratory testing and validation is an important initial step in technology development. A major factor that determines the applicability and validity of testing results is the integrity of process water samples used in lab and field studies for this purpose. The results presented in this paper demonstrate aging of SAGD process water and its direct implication on membrane performance testing. Aging in samples collected after primary bitumen/water separation occurred mainly through reactions of dissolved organic species with air. This resulted in a gradual change in appearance, accompanied by a significantly higher tendency to foul membranes in dead-end filtration tests. The root cause for this change was proposed to be the reaction of phenolic species with oxygen, leading to more compressible and tightly packed filter cakes on the membrane surface. This effect was mitigated by minimizing air exposure during sample collection and handling. These results establish that preventing oxygen exposure to the sample is critical for maintaining sample integrity during a test program. Although this study focuses on filtration, aging effects can also lead to misleading results in laboratory testing of other water treatment processes and must be carefully considered during technology evaluation and development.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/ie3005513
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source American Chemical Society Journals
subjects Applied sciences
Bitumens
Chemical engineering
Exact sciences and technology
Exposure
Filter cake
Filtration
Gravitation
Integrity
Membrane separation (reverse osmosis, dialysis...)
Membranes
Plant reliability
title Aging of Water from Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) Operations Due to Air Exposure and Effects on Ceramic Membrane Filtration
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