2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(163b) The Relationship Between Contact Pressure and Coalescence Time for Water-in-Bitumen Emulsions
Authors
In this work, we have performed experiments with dueling, Hele-Shaw, water drops at the end of micropipettes within a microchannel, contacting them at controlled times and contact pressures. Our modified experimental setup allows us to study the coalescence of water drops in bitumen concentrations between 33 and 67 wt% (a solvent to bitumen ratio ranging between 0.5 to 2, which is close to the industrial operating range). Our investigations show that unlike prior studies, water drops in bitumen do coalesce, but only if the right combination of contact time and contact pressure are provided. The greater the contact pressure, the shorter the coalescence time. At a given contact pressure, the coalescence time increases as the weight percent of bitumen increases, but decreases as the pH of water is increased from 8.3 to 9.9. Empirical correlations are developed for the contact time as a function of the contact pressure for each combination of bitumen concentration and pH. These correlations are used to generate maps of drop radius vs. strain rate, outlining the parameter regimes in which coalescence should be expected in sheared emulsions. The regime of drop radius vs. strain rate for coalescence expands with pH, as expected, but also expands as the bitumen concentration is increased, which is counterintuitive. These aspects will be explained in detail in the presentation.
References
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