GP Racing (UK)

UNDER THE HOOD

- PAT SYMONDS @F1racing _mag facebook.com/ f1racingma­g

Pat Symonds on the road to a greener F1

22

In last month’s column we looked at the need for F1 not just to embrace environmen­tal sustainabi­lity but also to promote, using its sheer persuasive power, the path to an ultra-low carbon economy. This month we’ll dig deeper into how we may achieve this, but first we need to expand a little on fuel chemistry.

Many fuels are made of combinatio­ns of carbon and hydrogen atoms. One of the most simple comes from combining four hydrogen atoms with one of carbon to give CH4 – a gas known as methane. Ethanol, the most common automotive bio-fuel, is made by combining two carbon atoms, six hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom to give C2H5OH. Ethanol has the advantage of being easy to make and therefore cheap, but unfortunat­ely it doesn’t have the energy content of gasoline.

For every litre of convention­al fuel burned we would need to burn 1.5 litres of ethanol to get the same energy. However, accepting that these hydrocarbo­n fuels can be made from atoms, we can also make the basis of gasoline, which is a substance known as iso-octane. This is made from eight carbon atoms and 18 hydrogen atoms – C8H18. This would then be what is known as a ‘drop-in’ fuel, meaning it could be used in an existing engine without requiring any modificati­ons. It would still need some additives, but these would be the same as are currently added to convention­al gasoline and has a further advantage of not having some of the undesired elements, such as sulphur, in it.

While this may seem the perfect answer unfortunat­ely it’s much more difficult, and energy consuming, to make a drop-in fuel than a simple alcohol-type fuel such as ethanol. Equally there are no plants or refineries in the world capable of making enough synthetic fuel, or e-fuel as it’s sometimes called, to supply F1 – let alone the larger automotive community.

Although alcohol fuels may not have high energy density they do possess other advantages, such as very high resistance to knock, an uncontroll­ed and violent ignition which is detrimenta­l to both power and the very structure of the engine.

Let’s consider now the engine itself. The laws of thermodyna­mics show that engine thermal efficiency, in other words its efficiency at converting chemical energy to mechanical energy, is a function of compressio­n ratio. This is the main reason diesel engines are so efficient. Current F1 engines run very high compressio­n ratios but they’re limited by knock. The propensity of an engine to knock depends on the fuel it’s run on – and gasoline, while good, isn’t the best in this respect.

Tailored fuels, made from advanced sustainabl­e bio resources, matched to engines specifical­ly designed to exploit the characteri­stics of the fuel could move us forward to the next steps of efficiency. After all, the easiest way to reduce our carbon footprint, and to reduce cost to the consumer, is to reduce the amount of fuel burned no matter what its source.

While much of the low-hanging fruit of engine efficiency has already been harvested, we need to set ambitious targets for the next generation of power units. Just a few years ago 50% efficiency seemed a dream and yet F1 engines have achieved it. When we consider the next F1 engine we need to define targets rather than technologi­es, and the determinat­ion of achieving 60% efficiency is no longer a dream.

It is ambitious, though, and current technology will not get us there. We need to think laterally, to go back to basics and see what technologi­es will allow us to run higher compressio­n ratios and what will reduce the inevitable losses. For example, should the engine be a two-stroke? Turbocharg­ing, direct injection and plasma ignition could allow a very efficient two-stroke to run with none of the inherent problems of pastgenera­tion two-strokes. More importantl­y, an engine running on a synthetic ultra-lowcarbon fuel with a very high octane rating could run at the sort of compressio­n ratios that engines running on today’s gasolines couldn’t begin to sustain. Equally we may find traditiona­l poppet valves are no longer suitable since the clearance volume needed

FAILURE TO REDUCE CO2 EMISSIONS WILL LEAVE THE SPORT AS A PARIAH WITH NO PLACE IN MODERN SOCIETY

for them to open into the cylinder imposes some limitation­s on achievable compressio­n ratios.

When considerin­g future engine technologi­es we should also consider a full life-cycle analysis of the power unit itself and the supporting energy source, be it chemical or electrical. We live in a rapidly evolving world and one in which industry must be powered by low-carbon electricit­y. Once we have that, should we just be using it to charge batteries (which have built in environmen­tal problems) and new infrastruc­ture needs, or should we be using that electricit­y to synthesise liquid hydrocarbo­n fuels? We’ll probably need to follow both paths, with full-battery electric vehicles having a role in an urban environmen­t, and low-carbon-fuelled, highly hybridised internal combustion engines powering non-urban light vehicles and all heavy vehicles.

F1 could play a huge role in this transition. It’s proven its ability to advance technology readiness levels from experiment­al to production, and must do so again. It also has the profile to engage the public in these technologi­es. The difference this time is that it doesn’t have an option. Failure to reduce CO2 emissions will leave the sport as a pariah with no place in modern society.

The next step needs to come with the next generation of power unit. F1 must be the first series to run on 100% advanced sustainabl­e fuels to demonstrat­e their effectiven­ess. The fuel and the engine must be designed in harmony, and hybridisat­ion and electrical systems must be taken to a new level. When a full circular life-cycle analysis is done, F1 must pave the way toward a true net zero carbon society in the transport arena.

 ??  ?? Ethanol, the most common bio-fuel, is made from combining carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms. Easy to produce, the downside is that it doesn’t have the energy content of convention­al fuel
Ethanol, the most common bio-fuel, is made from combining carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms. Easy to produce, the downside is that it doesn’t have the energy content of convention­al fuel
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 ??  ?? Engines have achieved 50% efficiency in F1 but current technology will not go much further, so there is a need to go back to basics
Engines have achieved 50% efficiency in F1 but current technology will not go much further, so there is a need to go back to basics

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