Journal
JOURNAL OF THE ENERGY INSTITUTE
Volume 107, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.joei.2023.101196
Keywords
Fuel; Biofuel; Fuel aging; Deposits; Oxidized FAME; Test rig
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Understanding aging phenomena of alternative fuels is crucial due to the introduction of different aging-related phenomena. A novel test rig was designed to simulate real conditions and achieve knowledge gain for fuel aging and additive technology development. The results showed that pure FAME performed well in the realistic setup due to its high polarity preventing deposit accumulation. Insightful information with minimal effort and sample volume was obtained through benchtop 1H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Conventional fuel and FAME blends were found to lead to system failures and large quantities of deposits.
Understanding aging phenomena of alternative fuels, such as fatty acid methyl esters (FAME), hydrogenated vegetable oil, or synthetic power-to-X products, has become a highly active research field since their introduction led to different aging-related phenomena. More alternative fuels lead to ever more fuel blend varieties that all need to undergo a usability assessment, implying plenty fuel aging experiments. Laboratory tests usually arti-ficially age fuels at high temperatures to examine aging products. However, in this work, a novel test rig was designed to closely simulate the conditions encountered in practice. This way, knowledge gain and innovation can be achieved for fuel aging and concerning hardware and additive technology to decrease deposit buildup. Results from pure FAME revealed a discrepancy, in which it failed conventional fuel aging tests but performed well in this realistic setup due to the fuel's high polarity preventing deposit accumulation. Among the stan-dardized fuel tests, thermal, spectroscopic, and chromatographic techniques used in this work, benchtop 1H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy delivered insightful information with minimal effort and sample volume. The examined deposits mainly consist of (oxidized) FAME species (approximate to 70%) interacting with aromatic compounds (approximate to 5.5%). Moreover, only blends of conventional fuel and FAME lead to system failures and large quantities of deposits.
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