UFO wrote:
I'd like to see that documented. Cetane is not an indication of how much energy is in the fuel. I was using biodiesel as an example.
It's very difficult to find any research available for public viewing without paying for it. When I was in college I could get copies of any study ever performed on anything in the universe. Boy do I miss that. Anyway I have found some indirect evidence of power increase with high cetane fuels. By high cetane I refer to cetane numbers of 50-60. Here is a nice study by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Page 15 shows a significant increase in low temp heat release and corresponding decrease in peak temp and pressure spike. Temperature and pressure spikes in a combustion engine are wasted energy as much of the spike becomes lost to the coolant and pressure to engine flexing.
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/vehiclesand ... unting.pdf
A premium high cetane fuel usually has a higher energy content than the cheap ULSD now sold. The desulfurization process removes more of the aromatics, which decreases the density of the fuel and leaves a higher percentage of alkanes in it. Most ULSD D2 ranges fromC10H20 to C15H28, with C12h23 being the average. Hexadecane (cetane) has a chemical number of C16H34, having a higher heat value per molecule. In fuel with higher natural cetane, the usable BTU value is higher.
In larger slower rpm engines, cetane has little effect on power output because the the fuel is completely combusted by the time the piston is through the power stroke. However, in small high speed engines like ours, without dynamic timing adaptability, the shorter ignition time delay caused by increased cetane value, causes the main burn event to initiate at the beginning of the power stroke vs the middle of it. This translates to higher torque and hp and is the reason why diesel dragsters need high cetane premium fuel.
In the most modern varieties of diesel engines such as the VM Motori Panther, the CPU senses when ignition occurs through the glow plug and can dynamically advance or retard the timing in accord with the ignition characteristics of each tank of fuel. This kind of engine benefits very little from a higher cetane number fuel.
here is some further reading.
http://books.google.com/books?id=yzhgRq ... 3#PPA99,M1
http://books.google.com/books?id=FHtgXj ... t&resnum=7