1984 CRC (Coordinating Research Council) Intermediate Temperature Driveability Program Using Gasoline-Alcohol Blends.

Abstract

Thirty 1984 and six 1979 model-year vehicles were tested with two hydrocarbon-only fuels and twenty hydrocarbon-alcohol blends during October and November 1984 at Paso Robles, California, to identify the effect of alcohol type, alcohol concentration, cosolvent type and methanol to cosolvent ratio on cold-start and warmup driveability at intermediate temperature (40 F-60 F). The secondary objective of the program was to determine if the 10, 50, and 90 percent distillation temperatures of these test fuels could predict cold-start and warmup driveability performance. In general, the hydrocarbon-only fuels gave better driveability than the hydrocarbon-alcohol blends; however, the 1984 model vehicles had better driveability on all fuels than earlier programs had exhibited. Fuel-injected vehicles gave better driveability than carburetted vehicles with all fuels. Increased volatility improved driveability with both hydrocarbon-only fuels and hydrocarbon-alcohol blends. Gasoline-ethanol blends gave better driveability than gasoline-methanol (without a cosolvent) blends. No significant differences were observed when ethanol and gasoline-grade tertiary butyl alcohol were compared as cosolvents in methanol blends.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Aug 01, 1987
Accession Number
ADA188330

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Alcohols
  • Control Systems
  • Engines
  • Equations
  • Fuel Injection
  • Fuel Systems
  • Fuel Tanks
  • Fuels
  • Gasoline
  • Hydrocarbon Fuels
  • Loops
  • Malfunctions
  • Materials
  • Materials Laboratories
  • Standards
  • Test And Evaluation
  • Vehicles

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  • Petroleum Engineering