摘要

Critical coalescence concentration (CCC) is commonly used to characterize frothers. The CCC is determined from a plot of Sauter mean bubble size (D-32) vs. frother concentration, referred to here as the 'addition' method. Industrial flotation systems can encounter a number of naturally occurring surfactants and salts that also influence bubble size. In effect there is a 'system' CCC. This paper introduces a dilution method to identify the system CCC. The study verifies the dilution technique using the commercial frother DF-250. It is shown that the system CCC can be expressed as an equivalent DF-250 concentration to provide context and a means of comparing water samples. The viability of using gas holdup to provide an estimate of process water D32 is also explored. To illustrate the procedure three samples of process water from the Albian Sands bitumen processing plant were examined. They proved to be similar and yielded a system CCC equivalent to about 20 ppm DF-250. It is concluded that the dilution and frother equivalent techniques can be used to help identify system hydrodynamic properties.

  • 出版日期2013-9