This application claims the benefit of priority of South African Provisional Application No. ZA 2004/3179, which was filed on Apr. 28, 2004, and which application is hereby incorporated by reference.
This application relates to crude oil derived and Gas-To-Liquids (GTL) diesel fuel blends.
Synthetic fuels such as GTL (Gas To Liquids) diesel fuel have seen a significant rise in interest in recent years. They are considered to be extremely clean fuels, with negligible sulfur and aromatics, and are odor-free and have a cetane number of >70.
The GTL diesel fuel used in the examples in this patent specification was manufactured by means of the Sasol Slurry Phase Distillate (Sasol SPD™) process, which consists of three process steps, as depicted schematically in
In the first step an auto-thermal reforming process is used to convert the natural gas into the synthesis gas, a mixture of CO and H2. In a second step the synthesis gas is converted into a so-called syncrude containing predominantly paraffinic hydrocarbons, by a Fischer-Tropsch process. This syncrude is primarily in the form of waxes and distillates, which are further refined in a third, product upgrading step by means of mild hydro-processing, in order to produce products that meet commercial fuel specifications, such as diesel fuel and kerosene.
The invention provides a diesel fuel composition comprising both crude oil derived diesel fuel, which crude oil derived diesel fuel has a density at 15 deg C. below 0.85 kg/l, a sulphur content of less than 10 mg/kg, a polyaromatics content of below 5 mass %, and a cetane number from 51 to 60, and Gas-to-Liquids (GTL) diesel fuel, which GTL diesel has a density at 15 deg C. of below 0.78 kg/l, a sulphur content of less than 1 mg/kg, polyaromatics below 0.1 mass %, and a cetane number above 65, in a volumetric ratio range of from 1:99 to 99:1 and with a molar H:C ratio of between 1.8:1 and 2.1:1.
The diesel fuel composition may have less than 10 mg/kg sulphur.
The diesel fuel composition may have less than 5 mass % polycyclic aromatics.
The crude oil derived diesel fuel may be a fuel meeting the EN590 specification.
The volumetric ratio range may be from 1:9 to 9:1.
The volumetric ratio range may be from 1:5 to 5:1.
The molar H:C ratio may be from 1.85:1 and 2.05:1.
The molar H:C ratio may be from 1.9:1 and 2.00:1.
The diesel fuel composition may have an ASTM D86 10% distillation temperature of from 180° C. to 220° C.
The ASTM D86 10% distillation temperature may be from 200° C. to 215° C.
The diesel fuel composition may have a flash point of between 60° C. and 80° C., typically from 65° C. to 78° C.
The diesel fuel composition may have a density at 15° C. of from 0.77 kg/l to 0.84 kg/l.
The diesel fuel composition may have a density at 15° C. of from about 0.8 kg/l to about 0.82 kg/l.
The diesel fuel composition may have a lower heating value of from 42 500 kJ/kg to 43 800 kJ/kg, usually from 43 100 kJ/kg to 43 600 kJ/kg, typically from 43 200 kJ/kg to 43 500 kJ/kg.
Use of Gas-to-Liquid diesel fuel as a blend component for a diesel fuel composition, which, when combusted in an engine, has reduced NOx and soot emissions, which composition comprises both crude oil derived diesel fuel meeting the European EN590 specification for sulphur-free diesel fuel (designated EU diesel), and the Gas-to-Liquids (GTL) diesel fuel, wherein the crude oil derived diesel fuel to Gas-to-Liquid diesel volumetric blend ratio ranges from 1:99 to 99:1 and the composition has a molar H:C ratio of between 1.8:1 and 2.1:1.
Reductions in both NOx and soot emissions may be obtained which are greater than indicated by the blending ratio of the GTL diesel in the crude oil derived diesel fuel.
Thus, more than 70% of the reduction in both NOx and soot emissions which may be be obtained with neat GTL diesel fuel, may be obtained with a 1:1 GTL:Crude derived diesel ratio.
More than 40% of the reduction in both NOx and soot emissions which may be obtained with neat GTL diesel, may be obtained with a 1:4 GTL:Crude derived diesel ratio.
However, in some embodiments the reduction in NOx emissions may be less than the reduction in soot emissions, and vice versa.
In some embodiments, the reduction in NOx may be minimal, however, the NOx will be reduced by the use of GTL diesel in accordance with the invention.
The properties of the composition and the blending ratios of the components are as described above for the composition.
The invention will be described with reference to the accompanying FIGS. 1 to 6.
The effect of GTL diesel fuel blends on exhaust emissions and engine performance has been studied. EU diesel fuel was used as a reference fuel, in addition to being the base stock for the blends. The properties of test fuels used in the investigation are shown in Table 1.
*Values for blends calculated according to blending ratio
Dynamometer tests were conducted with a Mercedes Benz™ E220 CDI vehicle, using the New European Driving Cycle (NEDC) emission test, and without any changes to the basic EU3 emission level engine calibration or engine hardware. The vehicle was tested with its standard calibration without any adaptation, with EU diesel, the 1:1 blend and for the neat GTL fuel. The relevant test vehicle data are shown in Table 2.
The results of the unadapted vehicle emission tests are depicted in
For neat GTL diesel fuel, an unexpectedly high reduction of >90% for HC and CO emissions was observed. The CO and HC reductions for the 50% blend scale roughly with the blending ratio. The NOx emissions were reduced marginally, with the 50% blend again showing about half the reduction of the neat GTL diesel fuel. The same applies for the HC+NOx data.
PM emissions were reduced by up to 30% with the GTL diesel. Surprisingly, a strong non-linear characteristic was evident with the 50% blend (EU50), which showed a reduction of approximately 22%.
The potential for further emission reductions with the test fuels, and including the optimisation of a limited number of software parameters in the Engine Control Unit (ECU) of the engine was then investigated. For this purpose, an engine mounted on a test bench was used. Steady state test runs were carried out at five operating points characteristic for NEDC emission test cycle. The software parameters investigated were the Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) rate, the start of pilot injection (SOPI) and the start of main injection (SOMI). The five operating points are shown in Table 3
It is evident that GTL diesel offers a significant reduction in terms of both soot emissions and NOx for all the EGR rates tested. The soot emission increase for decreasing NOx values follows the expected pattern, and enables a wide range of possible alternative software calibrations. Surprisingly, the strong non-linear behavior of the EU50 blend is again evident—this fuel exhibits almost the same benefits as neat GTL diesel fuel.
A design of experiments (DOE) method was used to numerically optimize the three software parameters simultaneously. The DOE predictions were verified by actual experiments, and an example of the results of the simultaneous optimisation of all three calibration parameters at each of the engine operating points is shown in
The measured data at the five steady-state test points was used to predict the emissions over the NEDC test cycle. Empirical factors were used to account for the differences between the steady-state and transient engine operation. All results from the selected operating points have been normalized and combined into one universal plot, shown in
The neat GTL would allow for a simultaneous soot and NOx reduction of at least 35% compared to the EU diesel calibration. For constant engine-out soot emission, a NOx reduction of 45% seems possible. Due to the non-linear response with the GTL blends, reductions in soot and NOx that are greater than expected when considering the blending ratio, could be obtained with the EU80 and EU50 fuels. This non-linear response is depicted graphically in
A 50% GTL blend would recover approximately 85% of the soot/NOx benefits of neat GTL, while a 20% GTL blend would recover approximately 48% of the benefit. It should be noted that the results shown so far have been facilitated by a simple and cost-efficient software adaptation only. It is to be expected that further improvements will be possible if additionally hardware changes, e.g. in the injection system and/or the combustion chamber design are taken into account.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/ZA03/00157 | Oct 2003 | WO | international |
04/3179 | Apr 2004 | ZA | national |