Integral to process plant design is identification of the slurry system operating window that allows increased throughput while decreasing capital and operating costs.
Understanding rheology or fluid flow, dewatering including thickening and filtration and the surface chemistry/rheology interrelationship is prerequisite to slurry system design, operation and risk management.
Although the situation has improved over recent years, investment into understanding slurry fundamentals is still often insufficient to mitigate against the risk of under or over design and poor operating performance.
The course will focus on identifying what information is required, how to interpret measured data and how to apply to new system design and existing operations.
You will learn about slurry physical and chemical properties, how flow properties or rheology are measured and how to meaningfully interpret rheograms for viscosity, yield stress and time dependence information.
The course will outline how to apply rheology and surface chemistry for pipeline transport and thickening equipment selection and optimal control and operation.
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