User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
diesels- Plural of diesel
Extensive Definition
Diesel or diesel fuel () in general is any
fuel used in diesel
engines. Production costs are 25-35% less than that of regular
gasoline. The most common is a specific fractional
distillate of petroleum fuel oil, but
alternatives that are not derived from petroleum, such as biodiesel, biomass
to liquid (BTL) or gas to
liquid (GTL) diesel, are increasingly being developed and
adopted. To distinguish these types, petroleum-derived diesel is
increasingly called petrodiesel. Ultra-low sulfur diesel (ULSD) is a term
used to describe a standard for defining diesel fuel with
substantially lowered sulfur contents. As of 2007, almost every
diesel fuel available in America and Europe are ULSD type.
History
Etymology
The word "diesel" is derived from the German inventor Rudolf Christian Karl Diesel (March 18, 1858 – September 30, 1913) who in 1892 invented the diesel engine.Diesel Engine
Diesel engines are a type of internal combustion engine. Rudolf Diesel originally designed the diesel engine to use vegetable oils as a fuel in order to help support agrarian society and to enable independent craftsmen and artisans to compete with large industry.Petroleum diesel
Petroleum diesel, or petrodiesel, is produced
from petroleum and is
a hydrocarbon
mixture, obtained in the fractional
distillation of crude oil
between 200 °C and 350 °C at atmospheric
pressure.
The density of petroleum diesel is about 850
grams per litre whereas petrol (gasoline) has a density
of about 720 g/L, about 15% less. When burnt, diesel typically
releases about per US gallon, whereas gasoline releases per US
gallon, about 11% less. Diesel is generally simpler to refine from
petroleum than gasoline. The price of diesel traditionally rises
during colder months as demand for heating oil
rises, which is refined in much the same way. Due to its higher
level of pollutants, diesel must undergo additional filtration
which contributes to a sometimes higher cost. In many parts of the
United States and throughout the UK, diesel may be higher priced
than petrol. Reasons for higher priced diesel include the shutdown
of some refineries in the Gulf of
Mexico, diversion of mass refining capacity to gasoline
production, and a recent transfer to ultra-low
sulfur diesel (ULSD), which causes infrastructural
complications.
Diesel-powered
cars generally have a better fuel economy
than equivalent gasoline engines and produce less greenhouse
gas pollution. Their greater economy is due to the higher
energy per-litre content of diesel fuel and the intrinsic
efficiency of the diesel engine. While petrodiesel's 15% higher
density results in 15% higher greenhouse gas emissions per litre
compared to gasoline, the 20–40% better fuel economy achieved by
modern diesel-engined automobiles offsets the higher-per-liter
emissions of greenhouse gases, and produces 10-20 percent less GHG
emissions than comparable gasoline vehicles. However, the EPA
carbon footprint estimates do not include the carbon cost of
vehicle manufacture, nor the carbon cost of filtering particulates,
sulfates, and nitrates emissions. Biodiesel-powered diesel engines
offer substantially improved emission reductions compared to
petro-diesel or gasoline-powered engines, while retaining most of
the fuel economy advantages over conventional gasoline-powered
automobiles.
In the past, diesel fuel contained higher
quantities of sulfur.
European emission standards and preferential taxation have
forced oil
refineries to dramatically reduce the level of sulfur in diesel
fuels. In the United States, more stringent emission standards have
been adopted with the transition to ULSD
starting in 2006 and becoming mandatory on June 1, 2010 (see also
diesel
exhaust). U.S. diesel fuel typically also has a lower cetane
number (a measure of ignition quality) than European diesel,
resulting in worse cold weather performance and some increase in
emissions. This is one reason why U.S. drivers of large trucks have
increasingly turned to biodiesel fuels with their generally higher
cetane ratings. High levels of sulfur in diesel are harmful for the
environment because they prevent the use of catalytic diesel
particulate filters to control diesel
particulate emissions, as well as more advanced technologies,
such as nitrogen oxide (NOx) adsorbers (still under
development), to reduce emissions. However, the process for
lowering sulfur also reduces the lubricity of the fuel,
meaning that additives
must be put into the fuel to help lubricate engines. Biodiesel and
biodiesel/petrodiesel blends, with their higher lubricity levels,
are increasingly being utilized as an alternative.
The U.S. annual consumption of diesel fuel in
2006 was about 190 billion litres (42 billion imperial gallons or
50 billion US gallons). http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/pet_cons_prim_dcu_nus_a.htm
Chemical composition
Petroleum-derived diesel is composed of about 75% saturated hydrocarbons (primarily paraffins including n, iso, and cycloparaffins), and 25% aromatic hydrocarbons (including naphthalenes and alkylbenzenes). The average chemical formula for common diesel fuel is C12H23, ranging from approx. C10H20 to C15H28Algae, microbes, and water
There has been much discussion and misinformation about algae in diesel fuel. Algae require sunlight to live and grow. As there is no sunlight in a closed fuel tank, no algae can survive there. However, some microbes can survive there, and can feed on the diesel fuel.These microbes form a colony that lives at the
fuel/water interface. They grow quite rapidly in warmer
temperatures. They can even grow in cold weather when fuel tank
heaters are installed. Parts of the colony can break off and clog
the fuel lines and fuel filters.
It is possible to either kill this growth with a
biocide treatment, or
eliminate the water, a necessary component of microbial life. There
are a number of biocides on the market, which must be handled very
carefully. If a biocide is used, it must be added every time a tank
is refilled until the problem is fully resolved.
Biocides attack the cell wall of microbes
resulting in lysis, the
death of a cell by bursting. The dead cells then gather on the
bottom of the fuel tanks and form a sludge, filter clogging will
continue after biocide treatment until the sludge has abated.
Given the right conditions microbes will
repopulate the tanks and re-treatment with biocides will then be
necessary. With repetitive biocide treatments microbes can then
form resistance to a particular brand. Trying another brand may
resolve this.
Petrodiesel spilled on a road will stay there
until washed away by sufficiently heavy rain, whereas gasoline will
quickly evaporate. Diesel spills severely reduce tire grip and have
been implicated in many accidents. They are especially dangerous
for two-wheeled vehicles.
Synthetic diesel
Wood, hemp, straw, corn, garbage, food scraps, and sewage-sludge may be dried and gasified to synthesis gas. After purification the Fischer-Tropsch process is used to produce synthetic diesel. This means that synthetic diesel oil may be one route to biomass based diesel oil. Such processes are often called Biomass-To-Liquids or BTL.Synthetic diesel may also be produced out of
natural
gas in the Gas-to-liquid
(GTL) process or out of coal in the Coal-to-liquid (CTL) process. Such
synthetic diesel has 30% less particulate emissions than
conventional diesel (US- California).
Biodiesel
Biodiesel can be obtained from vegetable oil (vegidiesel/vegifuel), or animal fats (bio-lipids), using transesterification. Biodiesel is a non-fossil fuel alternative to petrodiesel. It can also be mixed with petrodiesel in any amount in modern engines, though when first using it, the solvent properties of the fuel tend to dissolve accumulated deposits and can clog fuel filters. Biodiesel has a higher gel point than petrodiesel, but is comparable to diesel. This can be overcome by using a biodiesel/petrodiesel blend, or by installing a fuel heater, but this is only necessary during the colder months. A diesel-biodiesel mix results in lower emissions than either can achieve alone, except for NOx emissions. A small fraction of biodiesel can be used as an additive in low-sulfur formulations of diesel to increase the lubricity lost when the sulfur is removed. In the event of fuel spills, biodiesel is easily washed away with ordinary water and is nontoxic compared to other fuels.Biodiesel can be produced using kits. Certain
kits allow for processing of used vegetable oil that can be run
through any conventional diesel motor with modifications. The
modification needed is the replacement of fuel lines from the
intake and motor and all affected rubber fittings in injection and
feeding pumps a.s.o. This is because biodiesel is an effective
solvent and will replace
softeners within unsuitable rubber with itself over time. Synthetic
gaskets for fittings and hoses prevent this.
Chemically, most biodiesel consists of alkyl (usually methyl) esters instead of the alkanes and
aromatic hydrocarbons of petroleum derived diesel. However,
biodiesel has combustion properties very similar to petrodiesel,
including combustion energy and cetane
ratings. Paraffin biodiesel
also exists. Due to the purity of the source, it has a higher
quality than petrodiesel.
Biodiesel emissions
The use of biodiesel blended diesel fuels in fractions up to 99% result in substantial emission reductions. Sulfur oxide and sulfate emissions, major components of acid rain, are essentially eliminated with pure biodiesel and substantially reduced using biodiesel blends with minor quantities of ULSD petrodiesel. Use of biodiesel also results in substantial reductions of unburned hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and particulate matter compared to either gasoline or petrodiesel. C02, or carbon monoxide emissions using biodiesel are substantially reduced, on the order of 50% compared to most petrodiesel fuels. The exhaust emissions of particulate matter from biodiesel have been found to be 30 percent lower than overall particulate matter emissions from petrodiesel. The exhaust emissions of total hydrocarbons (a contributing factor in the localized formation of smog and ozone) are up to 93 percent lower for biodiesel than diesel fuel. Biodiesel emissions of nitrogen oxides can sometimes increase slightly. However, biodiesel's complete lack of sulfur and sulfate emissions allows the use of NOx control technologies, such as AdBlue, that cannot be used with conventional diesel, allowing the management and control of nitrous oxide emissions.Biodiesel also may reduce health risks associated
with petroleum diesel. Biodiesel emissions showed decreased levels
of PAH and nitrited PAH compounds which have been identified as
potential cancer causing compounds. In recent testing, PAH
compounds were reduced by 75 to 85 percent, with the exception of
benzo(a)anthracene, which was reduced by roughly 50 percent.
Targeted nPAH compounds were also reduced dramatically with
biodiesel fuel, with 2-nitrofluorene and 1-nitropyrene reduced by
90 percent, and the rest of the nPAH compounds reduced to only
trace levels.
Aircraft
The first diesel powered flight of a fixed wing
aircraft took place on the evening of September
18, 1928,
at the Packard Motor Company proving grounds, Utica, Michigan with
Captain Lionel M. Woolson and Walter Lees at the controls (the
first "official" test flight was taken the next morning). The
engine was designed for Packard by Woolson and the aircraft was a
Stinson
SM1B, X7654. Later that year Charles
Lindbergh flew the same aircraft. In 1929 it was flown non-stop
from Detroit
to Langley,
Virginia (near Washington,
D.C.). This aircraft is presently owned by Greg Herrick and
resides in the Golden Wings Flying Museum near Minneapolis,
Minnesota. In 1931, Walter Lees and Fredrick Brossy set the nonstop
flight record flying a Bellanca powered
by a Packard diesel for 84h 32 m. The Hindenburg
was powered by four 16 cylinder diesel engines, each with
approximately available in bursts, and available for cruising.
Modern diesel engines for propellor-driven aircraft are
manufactured by Thielert Aircraft Engines and SMA. These engines
are able to run on Jet A
fuel, which is similar in composition to automotive diesel and
cheaper and more plentiful than the 100 octane low-lead gasoline
(avgas) used by the
majority of the piston-engine aircraft fleet.
The most-produced aviation diesel engine in
history so far has been the Junkers
Jumo 205, which, along with its similar developments from the
Junkers
Motorenwerke, had approximately 1000 examples of the unique
opposed piston, two-stroke design powerplant built in the 1930s
leading into World War II in Germany.
Automobiles
The very first diesel-engine automobile trip (inside USA)
was completed on January 6,
1930. The trip
was from Indianapolis
to New York
City, a distance of nearly 800 miles (1300 km). This feat
helped to prove the usefulness of the
compression ignition engine.
Automobile racing
In 1931, Dave Evans drove his Cummins Diesel
Special to a nonstop finish in the Indianapolis
500, the first time a car had completed the race without a
pit
stop. That car and a later Cummins Diesel Special are on
display at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway Hall of Fame Museum.
In the late 1970s Mercedes-Benz at Nardò drove a
C111-III with a 5 cylinder diesel engine to several new records,
including driving an average of 314 km/h (195 mph) for 12 hours and
hitting a top speed of 325 km/h (201 mph).
With turbocharged diesel cars getting stronger in
the 1990s, they were entered in touring
car racing, and BMW even won the
24
Hours Nürburgring in 1998 with a 320d. After
winning the 12
Hours of Sebring in 2006 with their diesel-powered R10 LMP,
Audi won the
24
Hours of Le Mans, too. This is the first time a diesel-fueled
vehicle has won at Le Mans against cars powered with regular fuel
or other alternative fuel like methanol or bio-ethanol.
Competitors like Porsche predicted this victory for Audi as current
FIA and
ACO regulations are seen as pro-diesel. French automaker
Peugeot
entered the diesel powered Peugeot 908
LMP
in the 2007 24
Hours of Le Mans in response to the success of the Audi
R10.
In an effort to further demonstrate the potential
of diesel power, California-based Gale
Banks Engineering designed, built and raced a Cummins-powered
pickup at the Bonneville
Salt Flats in October 2002. The truck set a top speed of 355
km/h (222 mph) and became the world’s fastest pickup, and almost
equally notable, the truck drove to the race towing its own support
trailer.
On 23 August
2006, the
British-based earthmoving machine manufacturer JCB raced
the specially designed JCB
Dieselmax car at 563.4 km/h (350.1 mph). The driver was
Andy
Green. The car was powered by two modified JCB 444 diesel
engines.
Other uses
Poor quality, (high sulfur) diesel fuel has been used
as a palladium
extraction agent for the liquid-liquid
extraction of this metal from nitric acid
mixtures. This has been proposed as a means of separating the
fission
product palladium from PUREX raffinate which comes from
used nuclear
fuel. In this solvent extraction system the hydrocarbons of the diesel
act as the diluent while
the dialkyl sulfides act as the extractant.
This extraction operates by a solvation mechanism. So far
neither a pilot plant
or full scale plant has been constructed to recover palladium,
rhodium or ruthenium from nuclear
wastes created by the use of nuclear
fuel.
Health effects
Diesel combustion exhaust is an important source of atmospheric soot and fine particles, which is a fraction of air pollution implicated in human heart and lung damage. Diesel exhaust also contains nanoparticles which have been found to damage the cardiovascular system in a mouse model. The study of nanotoxicology is still in its infancy, and the extent of health and societal effects caused by diesel combustion is unknown. Biodiesel and biodiesel blends result in greatly decreased pollution levels.Taxation
Diesel fuel is very similar to heating oil which is used in central heating. In Europe, the United States, and Canada, taxes on diesel fuel are higher than on heating oil due to the fuel tax, and in those areas, heating oil is marked with fuel dyes and trace chemicals to prevent and detect tax fraud. Similarly, "untaxed" diesel (sometimes called "off road diesel") is available in the United States, which is available for use primarily in agricultural applications such as fuel for tractors, recreational and utility vehicles or other non-commercial vehicles that do not use public roads. Additionally, this fuel may have sulphur levels that exceed the limits for road use using the newer 2007 standards. This untaxed diesel is dyed red for identification purposes, and should a person be found to be using this untaxed diesel fuel for a typically taxed purpose (such as "over-the-road", or driving use), the user can be fined US$10,000. In the United Kingdom, Belgium and the Netherlands it is known as red diesel (or gas oil), and is also used in agricultural vehicles, home heating tanks, refrigeration units on vans/trucks which contain perishable items (e.g. food, medicine) and for marine craft. Diesel fuel, or Marked Gas Oil is dyed green in the Republic of Ireland. The term DERV ("diesel engined road vehicle") is used in the UK as a synonym for unmarked road diesel fuel. In India, taxes on diesel fuel are lower than on gasoline as the majority of the transportation that transports grains and other essential commodities across the country runs on diesel.In Germany, diesel
fuel is taxed lower than gasoline but the annual vehicle tax is
higher for diesel vehicles than for gasoline vehicles. This gives
an advantage to vehicles that travel longer distances (which is the
case for trucks and utility vehicles) because the annual vehicle
tax depends only on engine
displacement, not on distance driven. The point at which a
diesel vehicle becomes less expensive than a comparable gasoline
vehicle is around 20,000 km per year (12,500 miles per year) for an
average car.
Taxes on biodiesel in the United States
vary from state to state and in some states (Texas, for example)
have no tax on biodiesel and a reduced tax on biodiesel blends
equivalent to the amount of biodiesel in the blend, so B20 fuel is
taxed 20% less than pure petrodiesel.
See also
References
External links
diesels in Bosnian: Dizel gorivo
diesels in Bulgarian: Дизел
diesels in Catalan: Gasoli
diesels in Czech: Motorová nafta
diesels in Danish: Dieselolie
diesels in German: Dieselkraftstoff
diesels in Spanish: Petrodiésel
diesels in Esperanto: Dizeloleo
diesels in Basque: Gasolio
diesels in French: Gazole
diesels in Korean: 경유
diesels in Indonesian: Diesel
diesels in Italian: Gasolio
diesels in Hebrew: סולר
diesels in Lithuanian: Dyzelinas
diesels in Dutch: Dieselolie
diesels in Japanese: 軽油
diesels in Norwegian: Diesel
diesels in Norwegian Nynorsk: Diesel
diesels in Polish: Olej napędowy
diesels in Portuguese: Diesel
diesels in Russian: Дизельное топливо
diesels in Simple English: Diesel engine
diesels in Slovak: Motorová nafta
diesels in Serbian: Дизел гориво
diesels in Finnish: Dieselöljy
diesels in Swedish: Dieselolja
diesels in Vietnamese: Dầu diesel
diesels in Turkish: Mazot
diesels in Ukrainian: Дизельне паливо
diesels in Chinese: 柴油