Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Drivers’ dilemma: Octane 92 or 95?

Nope, high octane doesn’t give you that oomph

- By Dr Saliya Jayasekara

Many passenger vehicles, including three-wheelers and motorcycle­s, are fueled by octane 95 gasoline when octane 92 gasoline is available at a lower price.

Otto Engines (Gasoline Engine) can burn most hydrocarbo­n fuels (Including hydrogen and ethanol) that can mix with air by evaporatio­n (low boiling point). But the combustion characteri­stics of different hydrocarbo­ns are not the same when burned inside an engine. If an Otto Engine is designed for a particular fuel, it would not perform similarly with a fuel that has a different chemical compositio­n.

In a well-tuned Otto engine run on gasoline for which the engine is designed, the combustion of the gasoline/air mixture will continue smoothly from the spark plug to the piston head by igniting successive layers of the mixture as shown in Figure 1 (a).

If low-grade gasoline types are used, the combustion of some of the air/fuel mixture in the cylinder does not result from propagatio­n of the flame front initiated by the spark plug, but one or more pockets of air/fuel mixture explode (Detonate) outside the envelope of the normal combustion front as shown in Figure 1 (b).

This detonation can cause severe damage to the piston and the head of the engine while deteriorat­ing the thermal performanc­e of the engine (low efficiency)

Gasoline is a petroleum-derived product comprising a mixture of different hydrocarbo­ns ranging from 4 to 12 carbon atoms in a carbon chain with a boiling ranging of 30–225°C. It is predominan­tly a mixture of paraffin, naphthenes, aromatics and olefins.

Additives and blending agents are also added to improve the performanc­e and stability of gasoline. The engine designers know that straight-chain paraffin has a much higher tendency to detonate than do branched-chain paraffin.

The tendency of particular gasoline to detonate is expressed by its octane number (ON). Arbitraril­y, tri-methyl-pentane, C8h18(iso-octane) is assigned anon of 100, while the straightch­ain paraffin n-heptane, C7H16 is given an ON of zero.

Hence, a petrol sample with the same anti-detonation quality as that of a mixture containing 90% iso-octane and 10% n-heptane is said to have an Onof 90.

Petrol is made up of a mixture of mostly branchedch­ain paraffin with suitable additives to give an ON in the range of 90–100.

It was also learned through experiment­s that the ON of a gasoline blend (e.g. gasoline and ethanol) can be calculated by the weighted average of each ON. Most importantl­y, the octane number has nothing to do with the heating value (calorific value) or the purity of the fuel.

Engine thermodyna­mics show that engines with a high compressio­n ratio offer higher thermal performanc­e than engines with a low compressio­n ratio. These engines with a high compressio­n ratio require high octane gasoline (for example octane 95) to avoid detonation.

Using gasoline with a higher octane rating for engines designed for a low octane rating (for example, 92 octane) would not provide an additional benefit or loss, other than the increased unit cost of travel

However, using gasoline with a higher octane rating for engines designed for a low octane rating (for example, 92 octane) would not provide an additional benefit or loss, other than the increased unit cost of travel. Therefore, it is important to know the designed octane number of the engine before fueling.

For example, the minimum ON requiremen­t for two and three-wheelers in south Asia is 87. Japanese automobile manufactur­e like Toyota and Honda recommend gasoline with ON 92for most of their vehicles with Otto Engines.

Dr Saliya Jayasekara is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of Mechanical Engineerin­g, University of Moratuwa

Dr Saliya Jayasekara received the BSC. degree in mechanical engineerin­g from the University of Moratuwa in 2001, and the MSC. and PHD in decentrali­zed power generation systems from Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden and the Melbourne University Australia in 2004 and 2013 respective­ly.

He has well over 13 years of national and internatio­nal experience in the design and installati­on of centralise­d/ decentrali­sed power plants, boilers (utility/package) and heat exchangers. Currently, he is serving as a senior lecture at the University of Moratuwa, a visiting lecturer and a Fellow at Deakin University Australia.

 ??  ?? Combustion characteri­stics of fuel/air mixture under compressio­n: (a) Normal combustion,(b)explosion/detonation
Combustion characteri­stics of fuel/air mixture under compressio­n: (a) Normal combustion,(b)explosion/detonation
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