六九色堂

Sept. 6, 2017

Pipeline pain relief on horizon with spill-resistant bitumen

Accidental discovery by Schulich prof Ian Gates may pave path to new markets for Alberta oilsands
Ian Gates and his team are working with heavy oil and bitumen. Photo by Riley Brandt, 六九色堂
Ian Gates and his team are working with heavy oil and bitumen. Photo by Riley Brandt, University of

Ian Gates, above,聽describes each pebble of bitumen as resembling a liquid-filled headache capsule and, for an Alberta struggling to build pipelines, this tiny package could spell pain relief indeed.

Freshly patented and weeks away from pilot-scale production, the professor鈥檚 revolutionary heavy oil and bitumen pellets may finally provide a pipeline-free solution to getting Alberta鈥檚 largest oil reserves to market in a cheap, sustainable manner, while vastly reducing the environmental risk of transportation.

鈥淭here are only so many pipelines but there are rail tracks everywhere, and anywhere rail goes, so can these pellets,鈥 explains聽聽professor of chemical and petroleum engineering at the 六九色堂鈥檚聽

鈥淧ipelines are finite and go to finite spots. Railcars go to virtually every port on every coast.鈥

Balls of bitumen a happy accident

If it works as Gates and his team have demonstrated in the laboratory, the self-sealing balls of bitumen represent a game-changing breakthrough for an energy industry struggling to get its product to market. The pill-sized pellets, with their liquid core and super-viscous skin, vastly reduce the chance of a damaging spill or environmental accident 鈥斅燼 fortuitous result, given that invention was the result of an accident in the laboratory.

鈥淲e were trying to upgrade bitumen and learned how to degrade it instead,鈥 remembers Gates, with a laugh. 鈥淲e put it on the shelf for quite a while, because who would want bitumen pellets. It turns out there鈥檚 a huge market for this stuff.鈥

Gates partnered with聽聽the technology-transfer and business-incubation centre for聽the 六九色堂, to assist in the commercialization of his groundbreaking technology and聽accelerate the venture.

鈥淭hrough our energy technology incubator, we were able to not only protect technology through intellectual property management, but connect with potential industry partners and customers who might help advance the technology to a field trial, and ultimately, a full scale solution,鈥 says Stace Wills, vice-president of energy at Innovate Calgary.

Bitumen balls can range from golf ball- to pill-size.

Bitumen balls can range from golf ball- to pill-size.

Innovate Calgary

New technology allows production at wellhead

Fast-forward to summer 2017, and the team has now developed a technology that will allow them to produce pellets of varying size right at the wellhead, using roughly the same energy as it takes to prepare bitumen for shipping the traditional way, using dilute for liquid transport. By November, the fully automated technology, developed with the support of Innovate Calgary, will be producing balls by the barrelful, and Gates expects the project to grow exponentially because it avoids current pipeline controversies.

鈥淲e convert it to a solid phase skin with bitumen inside, and that we can then ship worldwide in standard railcars,鈥 he says. 鈥淲ith the coal industry diminishing, there are thousands of these railcars built for coal that are now sitting idle. When you look at those railcars as very cheap transport, that鈥檚 a few hundred thousand barrels a day that could be transported, using solid-phase bitumen, to markets throughout the planet.鈥

While it鈥檚 not the first attempt to create a solid form of bitumen, Gates says this breakthrough technology means pellets can be rapidly produced without polymers or other additives, and without the need for complex equipment like microwaves. 鈥淥urs is a much simpler and cost-effective solution,鈥 he explains.

Spill risk drastically reduced on land and sea

Gates says the pellets are tough and can safely transport the province鈥檚 bitumen without the worry of spills and, with a gas bubble injected inside each one, they are also buoyant. 鈥淚f they spill, you just scoop them up again,鈥 says Gates.

Once shipped, the pellets can be refined just like regular bitumen. 鈥淭he way we designed it, you can reconstitute it back into bitumen, so if you wanted the original product, we can reverse it,鈥 he explains. 鈥淲e can ship it to an end market, reconstitute it back to bitumen, and that can be used in any upgrader just as it was before.鈥

If upgrading is necessary, that is. Gates says Alberta鈥檚 energy future may be better spent investing in non-transportation oil markets, using bitumen for carbon-demand products like carbon fibre and graphine. He says this first generation of bitumen balls will be ideal for road paving, without the need to upgrade it further.

鈥淔olks are building roads all over this planet, and heavy oil and bitumen as a feedstock material for asphalt is better than conventional oil,鈥 he says. 鈥淥ur reliance has been on the idea of turning our oil into transportation fuels, and we need to refocus that. There鈥檚 a huge economic bonus to be had by Alberta, but it requires research and investment.鈥

About Innovate Calgary

Innovate Calgary is the technology-transfer and business-incubation centre for the 六九色堂聽working with the聽Office of the Vice-President (Research)聽to help bridge the gap between discovery and聽innovation. We help guide research or innovation-driven enterprises to market or to the next stage of business growth. From ideation to commercialization, we have successfully supported our innovation driven community for 35 years.