Impact of Fuel Octane Rating and Aromatic Content on Stochastic Pre-Ignition

Author(s):  
Andrew B. Mansfield ◽  
Elana Chapman ◽  
Kenneth Briscoe
2015 ◽  
Vol 49 (17) ◽  
pp. 10682-10691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Z. Short ◽  
Diep Vu ◽  
Thomas D. Durbin ◽  
Georgios Karavalakis ◽  
Akua Asa-Awuku

1980 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 357-367 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. A. Pfisterer ◽  
J. R. Dunn

Abstract The permeation of fuels through fuel hose compounds based on medium acrylonitrile NBR increases with aromatic content. Addition of low molecular weight alcohols as fuel extenders has an adverse effect on swelling and permeability, which is most marked at levels of 10–20%. NBR is resistant to unblended alcohols. Addition of tertiary butyl alcohol at levels up to 7% for improved octane rating does not adversely affect NBR. High acrylonitrile NBR and NBR-PVC blends have lower permeability to and greater resistance to swelling by aromatic fuel. They also exhibit improved resistance to swelling by alcohol modified fuel. XNBR has somewhat lower fuel permeability than regular NBR. A two-component fuel hose composed of a veneer of high acrylonitrile NBR, NBR-PVC or XNBR-PVC with the highest practical acrylonitrile level inside a medium acrylonitrile NBR is suggested as a route to satisfactory permeability and low temperature performance.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Luxenhofer ◽  
Michael M Lübtow ◽  
Lukas Hahn ◽  
Thomas Lorson ◽  
Rainer Schobert

Many natural compounds with interesting biomedical properties share one physicochemical property, namely a low water solubility. Polymer micelles are, among others, a popular means to solubilize hydrophobic compounds. The specific molecular interactions between the polymers and the hydrophobic drugs are diverse and recently it has been discussed that macromolecular engineering can be used to optimize drug loaded micelles. Specifically, π-π stacking between small molecules and polymers has been discussed as an important interaction that can be employed to increase drug loading and formulation stability. Here, we test this hypothesis using four different polymer amphiphiles with varying aromatic content and various natural products that also contain different relative amounts of aromatic moieties. While in the case of paclitaxel, having the lowest relative content of aromatic moieties, the drug loading decreases with increasing relative aromatic amount in the polymer, the drug loading of curcumin, having a much higher relative aromatic content, is increased. Interestingly, the loading using schizandrin A, a dibenzo[a,c]cyclooctadiene lignan with intermediate relative aromatic content is not influenced significantly by the aromatic content of the polymers employed. The very high drug loading, long term stability, the ability to form stable highly loaded binary coformulations in different drug combinations, small sized formulations and amorphous structures in all cases, corroborate earlier reports that poly(2-oxazoline) based micelles exhibit an extraordinarily high drug loading and are promising candidates for further biomedical applications. The presented results underline that the interaction between the polymers and the incorporated small molecules are complex and must be investigated in every specific case.<br>


Author(s):  
Rubén Santiago ◽  
Cristian Moya ◽  
Elisa Hernández ◽  
Andu-Vlad Cojocaru ◽  
Pablo Navarro ◽  
...  

Transport ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Algis Butkus ◽  
Saugirdas Pukalskas

Looking forward to Lithuania becoming a member of the EU it is very important to use a larger amount of renewing fuel. Based on economic and environmental considerations in Lithuania, we are interested in studying the effects of ethanol contents in the blended ethanol‐petrol fuel on the engine performance and pollutant emission of SI engine. Therefore, we used engine test facilities to investigate the effects on the engine performance and pollutant emission of 3,5 % and 7,0 % ethanol in the fuel blend and special additives, which reduce emissions and increase octane rating. The tests were carried out in the laboratory on a chassis dynamometer with two different cars. The experiment results showed that ethanol used in a fuel blend with petrol had a positive influence on engine performance and exhaust emission.


2019 ◽  
Vol 59 (7) ◽  
pp. 69-75
Author(s):  
Oleg S. Koledin ◽  
◽  
Ella A. Kovaleva ◽  
Mikhail Yu. Dolomatov ◽  
Svetlana A. Arslanbekova ◽  
...  

There may occur a special mode of combustion of the fuel-air mixture called detonation, when using motor fuel with a low octane rating. Methods of mathematical modeling are currently used to quickly determine octane numbers without using of expensive equipment. A nonlinear multidimensional QSPR regression model is proposed to predict the octane number of normal and substituted alkanes-gasoline components. The model associates octane numbers with a set of descriptors (topological characteristics of molecular graphs): the Randic index, the Wiener index, and the functions of the eigenvalues of the topological matrix of the molecule, reflecting the main structural and chemical factors, such as branching, the length of the carbon structure and the energy parameters of the molecules, for example perturbation of Hückel spectrum of molecules, as well as affecting octane numbers. The substituted alkanes were used as research objects. A studied sample included 36 hydrocarbons from the homolologus serious of substituted alkanes. The proposed model adequately describes the octane number of alkanes. The coefficient of determination of the model is 0.972. The model was tested on 19 substances which were not included in the base series. The average, absolute and relative error for the test sample of octane numbers were 1.5 units and 2.7% respectively. The model is applicable for engineering and scientific forecasts of octane numbers of various alkanes in motor fuel.


Author(s):  
W. C. Pfefferle

Inasmuch as conventional gas turbine combustors often produce soot even with the present low aromatic content fuels, the production of acceptable liquid turbine fuels from hydrogen deficient raw materials such as coal and tar sands requires large quantities of high cost hydrogen if conventional combustors are to be used. The economics of producing alternate turbine fuels would be improved if high aromatic content fuels could be burned in gas turbines without soot formation. Gas turbines using the catalytic combustor not only can efficiently burn highly aromatic fuels without soot formation but can meet all existing or proposed regulations on emissions of hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen oxides. Under certain conditions, high fuels can be burned with as little as 10 to 15 percent conversion of the fuel nitrogen to nitrogen oxides. In view of the potential savings, any program for alternate fuels should take into account the opportunities offered by the catalytic combustor.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 15105-15139 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Beyersdorf ◽  
M. T. Timko ◽  
L. D. Ziemba ◽  
D. Bulzan ◽  
E. Corporan ◽  
...  

Abstract. The use of alternative fuels for aviation is likely to increase due to concerns over fuel security, price stability and the sustainability of fuel sources. Concurrent reductions in particulate emissions from these alternative fuels are expected because of changes in fuel composition including reduced sulfur and aromatic content. The NASA Alternative Aviation Fuel Experiment (AAFEX) was conducted in January–February 2009 to investigate the effects of synthetic fuels on gas-phase and particulate emissions. Standard petroleum JP-8 fuel, pure synthetic fuels produced from natural gas and coal feedstocks using the Fischer–Tropsch (FT) process, and 50% blends of both fuels were tested in the CFM-56 engines on a DC-8 aircraft. To examine plume chemistry and particle evolution with time, samples were drawn from inlet probes positioned 1, 30, and 145 m downstream of the aircraft engines. No significant alteration to engine performance was measured when burning the alternative fuels. However, leaks in the aircraft fuel system were detected when operated with the pure FT fuels as a result of the absence of aromatic compounds in the fuel. Dramatic reductions in soot emissions were measured for both the pure FT fuels (reductions of 84% averaged over all powers) and blended fuels (64%) relative to the JP-8 baseline with the largest reductions at idle conditions. The alternative fuels also produced smaller soot (e.g. at 85% power, volume mean diameters were reduced from 78 nm for JP-8 to 51 nm for the FT fuel), which may reduce their ability to act as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). The reductions in particulate emissions are expected for all alternative fuels with similar reductions in fuel sulfur and aromatic content regardless of the feedstock. As the plume cools downwind of the engine, nucleation-mode aerosols form. For the pure FT fuels, reductions (94% averaged over all powers) in downwind particle number emissions were similar to those measured at the exhaust plane (84%). However, the blended fuels had less of a reduction (reductions of 30–44%) than initially measured (64%). The likely explanation is that the reduced soot emissions in the blended fuel exhaust plume results in promotion of new particle formation microphysics, rather than coating on pre-existing soot particles, which is dominant in the JP-8 exhaust plume. Downwind particle volume emissions were reduced for both the pure (79 and 86% reductions) and blended FT fuels (36 and 46%) due to the large reductions in soot emissions. In addition, the alternative fuels had reduced particulate sulfate production (near-zero for FT fuels) due to decreased fuel sulfur content. To study the formation of volatile aerosols (defined as any aerosol formed as the plume ages) in more detail, tests were performed at varying ambient temperatures (−4 to 20 °C). At idle, particle number and volume emissions were reduced linearly with increasing ambient temperature, with best fit slopes corresponding to −1.2 × 106 # (kg fuel)−1 °C−1 for particle number emissions and −9.7 mm3 (kg fuel)−1 °C−1 for particle volume emissions. The temperature dependence of aerosol formation can have large effects on local air quality surrounding airports in cold regions. Aircraft produced aerosols in these regions will be much larger than levels expected based solely on measurements made directly at the engine exit plane. The majority (90% at idle) of the volatile aerosol mass formed as nucleation-mode aerosols with a smaller fraction as a soot coating. Conversion efficiencies of up to 3.8% were measured for the partitioning of gas-phase precursors (unburned hydrocarbons and SO2) to form volatile aerosols. Highest conversion efficiencies were measured at 45% power.


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