fuel additives to add or
not to add? that is the question
by
Paul Abelson
Going
through some old files, I came across notes for a presentation I
gave to The Maintenance Council (TMC) back in September 1989. The
subject was “Fuel Additives: Fact or Fiction.” Back then, as today,
there were a few major national brands of additives: Power Service,
Howes, FPPF and Silco. Nalco Chemical and Stanadyne were in the
business, but they sold more to fleets than to owner-operators.
There were, however, hundreds of local brands. Some were good, but
many were harmful. They contained inexpensive solvents that would
attack fuel systems, hoses and seals. The bad ones were so bad that
in 1984, TMC developed an advisory, now RP312, “Qualifying Questions
to Minimize the Potential for Negative Side Effects from an
Aftermarket Diesel Fuel Additive Package.” These local home-brews
helped give fuel additives the names “Snake Oil,” or “Mouse Milk,”
and caused many fleets to prohibit drivers from using any
over-the-counter products.
Since
those days, diesel fuel has improved only slightly. The federal
government mandated lower levels of allowable sulfur, and limited
the percentage of aromatics (more on that later) in fuel. The Engine
Manufacturers’ Association and TMC each developed a set of
specifications for diesel fuel, but neither has been generally
accepted yet. Diesel is still sold as meeting specifications set by
the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM).
what is diesel
fuel?
Before
we examine additives, lets look at what diesel fuel is and how we
get it. Number two diesel is a middle distillate fuel. Crude oil
(petroleum from the ground) is heated, and various components
evaporate at increasingly higher temperatures. First to go is
butane, the lighter-than-air gas used in cigarette lighters. Last
are the heaviest, the road tars used to make asphalt paving. In
between are gasoline, jet fuel, heating oil, lubricating oil, bunker
fuel that ships use and, of course, diesel fuel. The fuel used in
trucks is a mixture of different types of molecules of hydrogen and
carbon. Different arrangements of these atoms produce hydrocarbons
with differing properties. Ignition occurs when there is sufficient
heat to start a reaction between the hydrocarbon fuel and the oxygen
in the air. Aromatics are molecules with rings of atoms linked
together. If you remember the benzine ring from high school
chemistry, you can picture how these molecules are structured.
Aromatics
are molecules more difficult to ignite, and they may not burn as
completely as paraffinic molecules. Their advantages are that they
are plentiful in the petroleum mixture (although with limits on
aromatics, that may be a disadvantage) and they tend to resist
waxing that plugs fuel systems.
Paraffinics
are straight-line molecules. To visualize the differences, picture
aromatics as a string of hexagons linked together, while paraffinics
are a string of “plus signs” all in a row. Paraffinics ignite easier
and burn more completely, but they cling together in cold weather
forming the wax matrix we call gelling.
Diesel
fuel cannot burn in liquid form. It must vaporize into its gaseous
state. This is accomplished by injecting the fuel through spray
nozzles at high pressure. The smaller the nozzles and the higher the
pressure, the finer the spray will be and the more readily the fuel
will vaporize. When more fuel vaporizes, combustion is more
complete, so less soot will form inside the cylinders and on the
injector nozzles. Soot is the residue of carbon, partially burned
and unburned fuel.
Sulfur
is found naturally in crude oil. When I gave my presentation, diesel
fuel could have had as much as 5 percent sulfur, although most
domestic fuel had less than 3 percent. Sulfur is a slippery
substance, and it helps lubricate fuel pumps and injectors. It also
forms sulfuric acid when it burns, and it is a catalyst for the
formation of particulate matter (one of the exhaust emissions being
regulated). Today, sulfur is limited to 500 parts per million (ppm)
or one-twentieth of 1 percent. In order to meet future emissions
regulations, it will probably be limited to 15 ppm. The upside is
cleaner burning fuel, but the downside, in addition to higher
refining cost, is loss of lubricity. This can be partially offset by
improvements in engine materials and precision manufacturing, but it
may still present problems in the future unless lubricity of the
fuel is increased.
Diesel
has other properties that affect its performance. It can deteriorate
over time, when exposed to moisture and oxygen. New diesel is light
in color. Older diesel is darker, due to the deterioration that
forms sludge. Diesel can hold water, which condenses on tank walls
as they cool. Water in the fuel causes a number of problems. A tiny
water droplet can blow the tip off an injector if it is suddenly
turned into super hot steam. It can freeze in fuel lines and block
flow. And it promotes the growth of bacteria that can grow on the
interface between the fuel and water. Bacteria form the slime that
can be found blocking fuel filters.
the role of fuel
additives
|
The main problems with diesel
fuel are:
-
difficulty getting it to start
burning
-
difficulty getting it to burn
completely
-
fuel waxing and gelling
-
reduced lubrication in the
fuel system
-
soot clogging injector
nozzles
-
water in fuel
-
bacterial growth
|
Fuel
additives (also called conditioners, supplements or treatments) are
designed to address these problems.
We
most often think of additives in winter to prevent gelling.
Chemicals called wax modifiers attach themselves to the paraffin
molecules and block them from joining together as they normally
would. While they can’t prevent all gelling, they can reduce the gel
point by as much as 30 degrees F, depending on the makeup of the
fuel. That could lower the CFPP (cold-filter-plug-point) by about 15
to 20 degrees.
Fuel
conditioners or additives must also control water so it doesn’t
freeze to block fuel flow. There are two types of additives to
control water: emulsifiers and de-emulsifiers. Emulsifiers break the
water into microscopic droplets and prevent the droplets from
joining together. The water is suspended in, and carried along with,
the fuel. The volume of droplets is not great enough to block lines
or damage injectors. FPPF is a typical emulsifier.
De-emulsifiers
work the opposite way. They modify the diesel so it cannot hold
water. The water, being heavier than the fuel, drops out and settles
at the bottom of the tank. It cannot travel through the system to do
damage, unless its level builds to where it is up to the level of
the fuel pick-up tube. When using a de-emulsifier, such as Howes,
it’s a good idea to check the water level in your tanks with
water-detecting paste on a stick. If there’s an inch or less, no
problem, but more than that, you should siphon the water out or
drain it.
To
prevent soot deposits from building on injectors and altering the
spray pattern, good additives have detergents. They prevent the
vicious cycle of soot forming, depositing in the spray holes,
blocking the spray so the pattern is less efficient, which causes
incomplete combustion that creates more soot, which blocks injectors
even more, continuing the cycle. By keeping things clean, detergents
maintain factory-engineered spray patterns. Often, detergents can
clean-up badly clogged injectors, but this takes time and rarely
gets them completely clean. That’s why it’s advisable to use a
detergent additive year round.
In
the days before electronic engines and low sulfur, higher paraffin
fuel, cetane improvers were important. Cetane, actually a paraffinic
molecule, is the measure of diesel fuel’s ability to ignite, just as
octane, a molecule in gasoline, is a measure of its ability to
resist pre-ignition, known as “knock.” Since the newer fuels have
more parafinnic molecules, which ignite more easily, cetane
improvers are not as important as they once were. The same is true
of chemicals that support combustion.
Lubricity
improvers, on the other hand, have become more important and when
ultra-low sulfur diesel comes along, they will be even more so.
Since diesel fuel has no added lubricity as delivered, fuel
conditioners with improvers can help prolong fuel system life. In
fairness to the engine builders, though, their engines are designed
to work with today’s “dry” fuel, and should be when the next
generation of diesel arrives.
The
final problem, bacterial growth, has traditionally been addressed
with biocides. In recent years, the EPA has developed strict rules
regarding their use, and many fuel additive suppliers no longer
incorporate biocides. Pure biocides can still be found, but they
should be used very carefully, following directions precisely. You
may need a biocide if your fuel tanks smell like rancid butter or if
your fuel filter has smelly sludge on it. For clean systems,
stabilizers like those in Penray’s Fire Prep will prevent the
formation of bacteria colonies — the slimy scum sometimes found in
tanks and on filters.
People
still ask me if fuel additives are necessary in this age of
electronic engines and low-sulfur fuel. My opinion is that with fuel
injection pressures around 30,000 psi and injector nozzles more
finely machined than ever before, a well-formulated additive package
is even more important in keeping engines operating at peak designed
efficiency for all the years we expect our engines to last.
I’m
also asked, “Which one is best?” That depends on where you operate,
how you run, what fuel you use, and how you maintain your truck. The
national brands are all good. To make an informed decision, read the
labels carefully. Decide what you need done, and select the product
that will best meet your needs. Once you’ve selected a product,
stick with it. If it’s not available wherever you run, either keep a
supply with you or switch to a brand you can find easily. Don’t keep
switching among brands. You may discover some chemical
incompatibilities that produce unwanted results.
Fuel
conditioners can help your maintenance program when used properly,
but they can’t work miracles. The best additive may not fix the
problems from a bad load of fuel, so be careful what you buy. What
may seem like a bargain may cost far more than your apparent
savings.
Paul Abelson is Land Line’s technical
editor and freelances from his office in Lisle,
IL.
| the diesel you
buy
Although a vehicle fuel, diesel
is shipped and formulated quite differently from gasoline.
There are far fewer diesel terminals, and most retailers and
truckstops tend to buy “pipeline fuel.” Refiners all place
diesel into the diesel pipeline, and they all draw diesel out,
but what each takes out has probably been refined by another
company. That means the brand you buy may not be from the
company that refined the fuel. For that reason, diesel is
generic. This is different from gasoline, with its advertised
properties. Gasoline is a differentiated product, not a
generic one. The one exception is Amoco’s premium diesel,
which is made to EMA preferred spec’s. Being generic, pipeline
diesel has only enough anti-corrosion and other additives to
protect the pipelines, not your engine.
There are, however, differences
in how pipeline diesel is handled, shipped and stored.
Housekeeping is important. If tanks aren’t designed to prevent
rainwater from entering during delivery, or if truckstops
don’t check tanks for water and bacterial growth regularly,
they may be breeding bad
fuel. |
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