4.3 Article

Cold performance of various biodiesel fuel blends at low temperature

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AUTOMOTIVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 293-300

Publisher

KOREAN SOC AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERS-KSAE
DOI: 10.1007/s12239-012-0027-2

Keywords

Biodiesel; Cold filter plugging point; Cold performance; Startability; Driveability

Funding

  1. Bioenergy Core Technology Research Center of Korea
  2. Ministry of Knowledge Econony (MKE)

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This study examines the cold performance of biodiesel blends in a passenger car and a light duty truck at -16 A degrees C and -20 A degrees C. Six different types of biodiesels derived from soybean oil, waste cooking oil, rapeseed oil, cottonseed oil, palm oil and jatropha oil were blended with different volume ratios (B5 (5 vol. % biodiesel - 95 vol. % diesel), B10 and B20). The cold filter plugging point (CFPP) and the cloud point had an effect on the startability and driveability of both the passenger car and the light duty truck. The startability and driveability of the passenger car with all biodiesel blends (B5) were generally good at -20 A degrees C. In the light duty truck, biodiesel blends (B10 and B20) of soybean, waste cooking, rapeseed and jatropha tended to be good at -20 A degrees C in the startability and driveability tests than the biodiesel blends (B10 and B20) of cottonseed and palm. In particular, the palm biodiesel blend (B10) failed at -20 A degrees C, and the palm biodiesel blend (B20) also failed at -16 A degrees C in the startability test. The cold flow properties of biodiesel dictate that the length of the hydrocarbon chains and the presence of unsaturated structures significantly affect the low temperature properties of biodiesel.

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