Biofuels Vs Fossil Fuels
Farmer's Weekly|August 16, 2019
Although biofuels are not used in South Africa, they are commonplace in many countries. Jake Venter compares the combustion properties of biofuels and the fossil fuels petrol and diesel.
Jake Venter
Biofuels Vs Fossil Fuels
The octane numbers of the most popular biofuels, such as methanol, ethanol, biogas and hydrogen, are higher than petroleum-derived petrol. This number is a measure of the way the fuel behaves during combustion.

In a petrol engine, the combustion process is initiated by a spark whose heat starts a burning process in the fuel molecules in its immediate vicinity. This flame spreads outwards from the spark until it dies from a lack of fuel mixture, contact with the colder combustion chamber wall, or both.

The process, which takes only a millisecond or two, is meant to play out in an orderly manner. Whether it does so or whether it ends violently (detonation or ‘knocking’) depends partly on the fuel’s octane number as well as the fuel mixture, spark timing and compression ratio of the engine.

A high-octane number implies that the fuel will burn in an orderly manner; a low octane number is associated with a flame that may deteriorate into an uncontrolled explosion, sending shockwaves through the engine.

Fossil fuels require additives to raise the octane rating to levels above 90 to make them suitable for modern engines, but the biofuels mentioned above will need fewer, if any, additives.

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