BLENDING MINED OIL SAND ORES FOR BITUMEN EXTRACTION OPERATIONS
20180347333 ยท 2018-12-06
Inventors
Cpc classification
E21B43/29
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
A process and process line for mining and blending a plurality of different grade oil sand ore is provided comprising forming an open stockyard for blending and stockpiling the different grades of oil sand ore, whereby the blending of the different grades of oil sand ore is managed by haul trucks dumping the different grades of oil sand ore at a dispatched coordinate either on the perimeter of the stockyard or in the stockyard pit.
Claims
1. A process line for mining and blending oil sand ore, comprising: a plurality of shovels for mining oil sand ore at least two separate mine faces, wherein at least one shovel is mining oil sand at a first mine face and at least one shovel is mining oil sand at a second mine face; a plurality of haul trucks for receiving oil sand ore, whereby at least one haul truck is receiving oil sand ore from a shovel mining at the first mine face and at least one haul truck is receiving oil sand ore from a shovel mining at the second mine site; an open stockyard for blending and stockpiling the oil sand ore, where blending of oil sand ore is managed by each haul truck dumping at a dispatched coordinate on a perimeter of the stockyard; and a device which moves the oil sand ore from the perimeter of the stockyard into the stockyard to form at least one stockpile of blended ore.
2. The process line as claimed in claim 1, the open stockyard further comprising a shovel for removing the blended ore from the stockpile to a mobile primary crushing station.
3. The process line as claimed in claim 2, wherein a bucketwheel is used to remove blended ore from the stockpile and deliver to the mobile primary crushing station.
4. The process line as claimed in claim 3, wherein the relocatable crushing station comprises an integral rock crusher and discharge conveyor.
5. The process line as claimed in claim 2, the open stockyard further comprising a second conveyor for receiving the crushed blended ore from the primary crushing station and delivering the crushed blended ore to a slurry preparation plant for preparing and oil sand slurry.
6. The process line as claimed in claim 5, wherein the slurry preparation plant is relocatable.
7. The process line as claimed in claim 5, further comprising a screening assembly for screening the oil sand slurry to form screened slurry.
8. The process line as claimed in claim 5, further comprising a solids removal assembly for removing additional solids from the screened slurry.
9. The process line as claimed in claim 8, wherein the solids removal assembly comprises a semi-mobile desanding assembly.
10. A method for blending at least two different oil sand ores, each oil sand ore having a different grade, comprising: providing at least one haul truck for each oil sand ore for delivering the oil sand ore to a designated area; mapping out a grid on the designated area indicating locations where each ore sand ore is to be deposited by each haul truck; and mixing the oil sand ore in the designated area to form a stockpile comprising a substantially uniform grade of blended oil sand ore.
11. The method as claimed in claim 10, wherein the designated area is a stockyard having a pit and the blended oil sand ore is stored in the pit until needed.
12. The method as claimed in claim 11, further comprising reclaiming the blended oil sand ore in the pit by means of a shovel.
13. The method as claimed in claim 12, further comprising crushing the reclaimed blended oil sand ore in a crusher located in the pit.
14. The method as claimed in claim 13, further comprising conveying the crushed reclaimed blended oil sand ore to a slurry preparation unit.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020] Referring to the drawings wherein like reference numerals indicate similar parts throughout the several views, several aspects of the present invention are illustrated by way of example, and not by way of limitation, in detail in the following figures. It is understood that the drawings provided herein are for illustration purposes only and are not necessarily drawn to scale.
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0026] The detailed description set forth below in connection with the appended drawings is intended as a description of various embodiments of the present invention and is not intended to represent the only embodiments contemplated by the inventor. The detailed description includes specific details for the purpose of providing a comprehensive understanding of the present invention. However, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details.
[0027] As used herein, semi-mobile equipment refers to equipment that is designed to be relatively easy to relocate (i.e., relocateable) but which generally does not move on a regular hourly or daily basis as mobile shovels and trucks do.
[0028]
[0029] In the embodiment shown in
[0030] Oil sand slurry prepared in the semi-mobile compact slurry preparation unit 9 can then be transported and conditioned in hydrotransport pipeline 28. Hydrotransport pipeline 28 is generally around 3 km in length, its length being sufficient to ensure proper conditioning of the oil sand slurry. Thus, hydrotransport pipeline 28 receives oil sand slurry from semi-mobile compact slurry preparation unit 9, transports the slurry while simultaneously conditioning it, and, optionally, delivers the conditioned slurry to a screening assembly 40 for removing a portion of the coarse solids, in particular, clay lumps and rocks, therefrom. Screening assembly 40 comprises a slurry screen for scalping/removal of wear-inducing lumps in the conditioned slurry down to a nominal size (e.g. about 12 to 15 mm and larger is removed). Screening assembly 40 may be relocatable by means of tracks 27. In one embodiment, the screening assembly 40 may be positioned further upstream, i.e., along the hydrotransport pipeline 28, before the oil sand slurry is fully conditioned. There may be instances where it is more desirable to remove the clay lumps and rocks as soon as possible, so there will be an optimal screening assembly location, where oil sand lumps have been ablated just below the screen cut size, for example, 1.5-2.5 km from the start of the hydrotransport pipeline 28.
[0031] The screened slurry 28 can optionally be further desanded using a semi-mobile solids removal assembly 29 for removing coarse sand therefrom. In one embodiment, semi-mobile desanding assembly 29 comprises a near pit desander (NPD), or separator, as described in Canadian Patent Application No. 2,809,959. In this embodiment, NPD is moveable by means of tracks 37. It is understood, however, that other moveable desanders or desanding circuits can be used.
[0032] The semi-mobile desanding assembly 29 produces a relatively clean (i.e., relatively free from bitumen) coarse solids underflow 31, which only needs to be transported a short distance to sand storage 32. The reduced solids upper zone or overflow 30 comprises bitumen, fines and water and is amenable to long distance transport through a pipeline to a bitumen extraction plant for polishing/water reheat and return. It was discovered that desanded oil sand slurry could be pumped long distances, has a lower power constraint and produces low wear on downstream equipment.
[0033] Operating cost for a slurry pumping system is relative to the mass transported. Thus, by removing 70% to 90% of the solids, the required energy, wear and capital costs all decline significantly. The resulting de-sanded slurry is also much easier to transport over long distances. The desanding vessel would be optimally located near the tailings deposition area, which may be an exhausted mine pit, to minimize the total transport distance of the coarse solids. In addition, by removing much of the sand prior to bitumen extraction, a higher quality and lower solids product would be delivered to extraction facilities. This would result in a higher residence time in separation vessels (such as existing PSVs) due to a reduction of flow rate, as a large fraction of flow has been diverted at the desander. In turn, this would result in bitumen yield uplift, as product quality is improved down the entire process stream.
[0034] One embodiment of oil sand ore blending is described in more detail with reference now to
[0035] With reference now to
[0036] Also present within the stockyard 305 is shovel 306 for excavating stockpile 352 and delivering the blended ore to a primary crusher 307, which is shown in
[0037] It is understood that more than one stockpile can be present in a given stockyard. For example,
[0038]
[0039] In particular,
[0040]
[0041] Thus, in the stockyard as shown in
[0042] In summary, potential benefits of the present invention may include: [0043] Multiple dump locations enable fully optimized, well averaged blending of ore from mining; [0044] Standard equipment can be used; [0045] Unleashes shovel and ore haul productivity; Shovel & trucks not constrained to the real time production rate of hydro transport; eliminates just on time constraints on mining operation; [0046] Reserve ore (reclaimable when haul trucks are hindered due to inclement weather); [0047] Simplification of civil works allows system to be positioned, and re-positioned, much closer to the mining face, thereby providing shorter haul distance.
[0048] From the foregoing description, one skilled in the art can easily ascertain the essential characteristics of this invention. However, the scope of the claims should not be limited by the preferred embodiments set forth in the examples, but should be given the broadest interpretation consistent with the description as a whole.