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Alternating current electrocoagulation (AC/EC) of fine particulate suspensions

Poor settling of solids increases land requirement for tailings containment and imposes severe constraints on the water balance. Consequent to these considerations, the alternating current electrocoagulation (AC/EC) technique emerged as a candidate for enhancing the settling behaviour of suspensions in the mineral, coal and oil sands industries. Hence, a fundamental study of AC/EC was undertaken with aluminum electrodes. Ground silica (d50 = 20 m), which formed a stable suspension, served as the model tailings solid at 5.0 wt % in water.

The AC/EC process consisted of two developmental stages: coagulation, marked by pH decrease in the silica suspension; and floc growth, characterized by pH increase from the minimum (i.e., the end of coagulation). AC/EC enhanced the initial settling rate of silica by over three orders of magnitude, and exhibited remarkable flexibility by virtue of the wide range of process parameters that could be optimized. For example, AC/EC can be operated in either the indirect or direct mode. The settling behaviour of bentonite (estimated d50 < 1 m) was more enhanced by indirect AC/EC, while that of silica benefited more from direct AC/EC.

Any condition that increased aluminum dosage (e.g., current, retention time), increased the initial settling rate of silica. Over the feed water pH range of 3.0 to 9.1, AC/EC was effective in enhancing the settling behaviour of silica. AC/EC was also effective over a wide range of temperatures (23 to 85C).

High electrical energy demand by AC/EC was observed throughout this study. Its optimization was beyond the scope of this work.

Dilution of a sample of Syncrude mature fine tailings (MFT) to 4.6 wt % solids sustained a stable suspension. Settling occurred after AC/EC treatment, a crystal-clear supernatant resulted and bitumen was recovered as froth. Entrained solids were easily spray-washed from the froth with water.

The settling behaviour of a Luscar Sterco fine coal tailings sample was not augmented by AC/EC, possibly due to contamination by the companys own electrocoagulation operation.

After having been stored dry for more than a year, electrocoagulated silica was an effective coagulant for as-received silica and Syncrude MFT. / Chemical Engineering

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:LACETR/oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:AEU.10048/990
Date06 1900
CreatorsIfill, Roy O.
ContributorsEtsell, Thomas H. (Chemical and Materials Engineering), Etsell, Thomas H. (Chemical and Materials Engineering), Liu, Qi (Chemical and Materials Engineering), Plitt, L.R. (Civil and Environmental Engineering), El-Din, Mohamed Gamal (Civil and Environmental Engineering), Kessick, Michael A. (RJ Oil Sands Inc.)
Source SetsLibrary and Archives Canada ETDs Repository / Centre d'archives des thèses électroniques de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format4262495 bytes, application/pdf

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