Standard

SAE 2009-01-0871

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Abstract

Emergence of fatty acid methyl esters (biodiesel) as a diesel fuel blend component, as well as fuel additization for management of mandated fuel sulfur reductions, have resulted in dramatic increases in fuel surfactant levels. This step change in fuel surfactancy has given rise to consistent failures of conventional separation and coalescence media used for separation of water from diesel fuel. Reported here are results of coalescing media development efforts that focused on treating fuel-water separation as an adsorption based or liquid-solid separation problem. Stationary phase surface area invariably promotes separation in adsorption based regimes. Media were developed with 60 and 160 fold increases in surface area relative commercial separation media currently used for this application. Media were tested in 7 (B7), 20 (B20), and 40 (B40) percent biodiesel in ultra low sulfur diesel blends. Developed media 09-17 yielded unadjusted time weighted average water removal efficiency in flat sheet SAE J1488 fuel-water separation tests of 96% (B7), 88, 91% (B20), and 84% (B40). Adjusted for dissolved water content, B40 performance for 09-17 was 90%. Under the same test conditions, unadjusted time weighted average water removal efficiency of conventional coalescence media was 74% (B7) and 68% (B20), and traditional barrier media was 70, 83% (B7) and 50% (B40). Results support the role for high surface area media in successful removal of water from Biodiesel-Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel blends.

Products specifications

  • Standard from SAE International
  • Published:
  • Document type: IS
  • Pages
  • Publisher: SAE International
  • Distributor: SAE International