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Gasoline Distillation Effect on Vehicle Cold Start Driveability General Motors Powertrain

SAE Technical Papers (1906-current) Available online

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Format:
Conference/Event
Author/Creator:
Geng, Pat Y., author.
Conference Name:
Powertrain & Fluid Systems Conference and Exhibition (2007-10-29 : Chicago, Illinois, United States)
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 online resource
Place of Publication:
Warrendale, PA SAE International 2007
Summary:
Cold start vehicle driveability performance depends on many parameters, one of which is the distillation character of the fuel. In the late 90's, a gasoline driveability index (DI) was developed for spark ignited combustion vehicles by a consortium of automotive and petroleum industry scientists based on correlation studies between controlled fuel quality matrices and vehicle performance under specific ambient conditions. The DI equation uses a weighted sum of gasoline distillation temperatures at the 10, 50 and 90 percent evaporation volumes, commonly called T10, T50 and T90. These three distillation volatility points are specified by the ASTM International D 4814 fuel specification and are seasonally adjusted. This paper studies the cold start driveability performance of Federal EPA Bin 5 and Bin 8 vehicles with respect to fuel distillation characteristics at temperatures other than T10, T50 and T90. Fuels studied include regular Summer-grade unleaded gasoline, high-DI (1255°F), high-DI with high-T70, and high-DI with both high T30 and T70. The results demonstrate that, although the latest vehicles can tolerate high-DI fuel in cold start driveability, the performance is deteriorated in some vehicles with the high-T70 and the combined high T30 and T70 test fuels. The degree of poor cold start performance also depends on the ambient conditions. Summer weather with high-dew point temperatures experienced more cold start driveability performance demerits with the two test fuels as compared to normal Summer quality gasoline. Gasoline survey data shows that high T70 fuels are available in the market place, but appear to be regionally isolated. When these high T70 or high in both T70 and T30 gasoline blends show up in the field it has resulted in severe vehicle owner dissatisfaction. The mechanism of the poor cold start performance with such fuels is discussed
Notes:
Vendor supplied data
Publisher Number:
2007-01-4073
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license

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