Abstract
Oil sands adhered on truck bed reduce transport capacity of the truck, require manual cleaning, and create hurdles for automated surface mining. Study on the adhesion properties of oil sands to solid substrates is important to minimize the fouling of substrates during mining operation. In this work, we study the influence of hydrophobicity and mechanical properties of the substrates on the adhesion strength of frozen oil sands. By using an adhesion force apparatus with temperature control, we measure the adhesion strength of both ice and frozen oil sands on six types of substrates with water contact angle from ∼20◦ to ∼130◦ and Young’s modulus from a few MPa to 300 GPa. A clear linear correlation between the adhesion strength of pure ice and that of frozen oil sands is observed. Furthermore, the adhesion strength increases with the load on the oil sands sample and reaches a plateau at ∼450 kPa. The maximum adhesion strength may be due to the limit of particle packing of oil sands. We also demonstrate that spray coating of anti-freezing liquids is effective for the mitigation of the adhesion of frozen oil sands. Substrates coated with various anti-freezing liquids showed undetectable oil sands adhesion strength at -20 ◦C with 0.06 MPa of load. The study on oil sands adhesion and potential fouling mitigation method may provide a potential solution to industries looking to reduce fouling of surfaces by frozen granular matter.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Information
Description
The fabrication process of structured PDMS substrate and the SEM image. The stability test of the sprayed ethylene glycol (EG) droplets on a steel substrate.
Actions
Title
Larger scale test without EG spray
Description
Video of the test procedure for a larger-scale test of oil sands to a steel substrate with a contact area of around 0.5 m^2 at - 18℃.
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Title
Larger scale test with EG spray
Description
Video of the test procedure for a larger-scale test of oil sands to a steel substrate after EG spray with a contact area of around 0.5 m^2 at - 18℃.
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