4.7 Article

Low-Temperature Properties of Renewable High-Density Fuel Blends

Journal

ENERGY & FUELS
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 883-888

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ef301608z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research [N0001411WX20949]

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The low-temperature properties of high-density terpene dimer fuels and fuel mixtures with JP-8, JP-10, and hydrogenated pinene have been studied by shear viscometry and thermomechanical analysis (TMA). Neat terpene dimers have a viscosity of 3.94 X 10(3) mPa.s at -10 degrees C, while 50:50 mixtures with JP-10, RJ-4, pinane, and JP-8 have viscosities 2-3 orders of magnitude lower at 23.9, 53.0, 24.9, and 3.7 mPa.s, respectively. Linear and branched alkanes in JP-8 disrupt glass formation of the dimers, explaining the significant difference between the viscosity afforded by bicyclic diluents and JP-8. To complement the viscosity data, TMA was used to observe low-temperature transitions (T-m and T-g) of the blended fuels. Mixtures of the terpene chillers with cyclic molecules show only glass transition temperatures with no observable melting points, while mixtures with JP-8 and decane show T-g values that transition to melting points at high concentrations of terpene dimers. The results suggest that blending conventional fuels with terpene dimers is an effective strategy for mitigating the high viscosity of the C20 molecules. In addition, blending these renewable fuels with conventional jet fuel (JP-8) imparts both a higher density as well as an improved volumetric net heat of combustion while maintaining an acceptable low-temperature viscosity when compared to JP-8 alone.

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