Elite Engineer Posted September 8, 2015 Posted September 8, 2015 For a boost in octane rating (starting at 93), I read, adding xylene to gasoline (about 30% of the gas that you have). Is it this simple or is there more to it ? ~EE
Elite Engineer Posted September 16, 2015 Author Posted September 16, 2015 Question is in the title ~EE
Enthalpy Posted September 20, 2015 Posted September 20, 2015 Why prefer xylene over toluene? I also bought "mixed isoalkanes C9 to C11" as a solvent at a hobby market. I suspect it's the heavier fraction of the output of a refinery's alkylation unit. Then it would be very similar to avaiation gas, which has octane rating ~120.
Enthalpy Posted September 20, 2015 Posted September 20, 2015 The octane rating relates very strongly with the autoignition temperature http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/fuels-ignition-temperatures-d_171.html aromatics have a high autoignition temperature, branched alkanes too, linear alkanes a low one. I don't know for sure the detailed reason.
swansont Posted September 21, 2015 Posted September 21, 2015 ! Moderator Note "What "mechanism" makes adding xylene to gasoline increase its octane rating?" (title referred to in post 3) merged with existing thread on the subject
GM11 Posted October 18, 2015 Posted October 18, 2015 check your pipe work and such for solvent compatibility
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now