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What is greener: premium or regular gas?

Discussion in 'Environmental Discussion' started by Trollbait, Mar 13, 2012.

  1. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    All else being equal, a car with an engine tuned for premium gasoline will get better fuel economy than one running regular octane. Not earth shattering better granted. There may even still be a slight edge for the regular in terms of cost. Though the improved economy narrows the cost gap when calculating cost per mile.

    So the premium fueled car will burn less total gasoline over its lifetime, and thus lower carbon emissions, petroleum imports, and other benefits of burning less.

    So it looks good at this point, but what about production. I've heard less premium is produced from a barrel of crude than regular. Is this purely due to market forces, i.e. there's less demand so less is made? Or is because of chemical limits, i.e. a low supply of octane boosters in the crude limits the amount per barrel?

    In the end consumption, premium fuel is a greener choice, if a car can take advantage of it. But is it when production is considered?
     
  2. ItsNotAboutTheMoney

    ItsNotAboutTheMoney EditProfOptInfoCustomUser Title

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    You can make less from a barrel presumably because there's more stuff in it.

    Premium should be better, because it has more energy in a smaller volume and theoretically the thermodynamic efficiency of the engines is greater.
     
  3. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    Both comments are incorrect. A unit of premium requires the same amount of feed stock as a unit of regular. Likewise a unit of premium does not contain more chemical energy.

    The only difference is the resistance to spontaneous ignition, which is called "octane" in the fuel world. The blend for premium contains petroleum products that are harder to ignite, or additives that produce a higher octane rating. This adds cost.

    Premium fuel has essentially the same specific energy as regular. Depending on how the higher octane rating is obtained, premium fuel may actually have lower specific energy than regular. This is true in the case of ethanol, when it is used as an octane booster.

    The advantage of premium fuel comes from being able to use higher compression in engines. Higher compression allows for more efficiency. The advantage is in engine efficiency, not inherent energy in the fuel.

    Diesel engines take this another step, and are the logical end point to this discussion about premium gas. Diesel has a very high octane rating, is cheaper to produce, and allows for higher efficiency engines.

    Tom
     
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  4. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Premium can be produced from cracking the hydrocarbons in regular gasoline. This costs the refinery more money and a little more energy. Its not more stuff, its the same amount of stuff but reconfigured. Premium only burns better in an engine designed to burn it:D
     
  5. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    I thought diesel had a really low octane rating. Which doesn't hinder the engine since the fuel is injected near the end of the compression stroke, instead of before it as a gas engine. Knocking is actually what ignites the fuel.

    Were you thinking cetane rating?
     
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  6. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    Tom no...diesel is very low octane but high cetane no. This is because diesel has the molecules which ignite by themselves under compression. High octane molecules are those which resist auto ignition and wait to get the spark from the spark plug.
     
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  7. ItsNotAboutTheMoney

    ItsNotAboutTheMoney EditProfOptInfoCustomUser Title

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    I knew that premium allowed for higher compression and therefore higher thermodynamic efficiency. And I knew that you needed a higher compression engine to benefit from it. (Which leads to the question, how on earth was I thinking that I it had more energy? I guess my brain mixed it up with the E10/E0 problem.). But, that you need a better engine doesn't really factor into the greenness.

    However, I'd actually assumed that the cracking worked the other way, in that you break down the chemicals to make the combustion easier rather than harder and that premium's cost came from more selective distillation. (Edit: again, duh, CNG: small molecules, allows very high compression; yes burns nicely, but that's not the point, it's not igniting on compression that's the issue).

    Anyway, I'd still say that the potentially higher efficiency provided by premium makes it greener.
     
  8. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    Premium is a mix of higher octane materials and is more expensive to make. Ethanol is high octane and so is an aromatic such as toluene. So it does not necessarily contain more energy but often is richer in the aromatics so in general probably higher density but that is not mandatory. As a pratical matter there are no cars designed to get better MPG based on fuel composition so I would say premium is slightly less green due to extra work to make it. Let's say you could design a car to run on all toluene maybe you could get better MPG but there is no market for that.
     
  9. ItsNotAboutTheMoney

    ItsNotAboutTheMoney EditProfOptInfoCustomUser Title

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    To me, something is green if it increases the potential for sustainability and decrease environmental damage.

    A good example is turbocharging. Originally it was used to increase power, now it's being used to decrease displacement. The potential, however, was always there.
     
  10. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    There are heavy components in the crude oil, that are cracked into other hydrocarbons. Premium requires a more expensive processes in a catylitic or steam cracker, think of it more of a different crack of the oil instead of a crack of gasoline:) I mispoke a little before and that can be confusing. In the old days they only needed to distill and blend gasoline, now to get a higher fraction other portions of the oil are cracked. I agree that it is greener to burn premium in an engine designed for it.

    Ford has the bob cat that can take advantage of e85s properties as well as work with normal gasoline:D
    Sneak Peek! Ford's "Bobcat" Dual Fuel Engine - PickupTrucks.com News
     
  11. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    Yes, my error, current diesel fuel is not high octane, but that doesn't change my point about high compression efficiency. The diesel engine is the logical endpoint in this discussion of compression.

    Actually diesel is low octane because it doesn't need to be high octane. A diesel engine can burn just about anything, although they are optimized for what we call diesel oil. The original design was intended to burn coal, but there was no reliable method for injection.

    Tom
     
  12. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    In the old days, yes less processing but lead TEL tetra ethyl lead was used to boost octane, an eco-bad actor but one helluva nifty octane booster for ICE fuels.

    Yes refineries do have cracking to make gasoline from heavy oil.
    But usually people talk about the platinum reforming process as the octane maker. The platinum catalyst makes aromatics which are higher octane, and higher energy content. Even though Premium does not need to have higher energy content in theory, one would think it generally does have more energy content.

    This suggests blending Premium and E10 could tend to cancel out the ethanol negative MPG impact, but as far as I know no one has data like that.
     
  13. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Definitely not asking to go back to the bad old days of TE lead or MBTE. I was just suggesting much more of the hydrocarbons in oil are being transformed to be used as gasoline now.

    I was using cracking generically. I really have no idea how much of the octane boosters are constructed from breaking longer chains or assembling shorter chains.:D Premium gas has essentially the same energy content though. It does take more energy to produce the components than the feed stocks.

    If your mid grade gas is burned in an engine designed for it, the greater efficiency should cancel out the lower energy content.
     
  14. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    In some places premium is also 10% ethanol. It might even be the octane booster.

    It would never have accepted by the public, but some of the disadvantages of E85 would have been lessened if flex-fuel engines were high compression premium/E85 fueled.
     
  15. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    Auto industry engine designers apparently decided 87 octane was high enough for most cases. If the engine designers thought they needed higher octane (eg; for CAFE MPG increases) I don't think they would hessitate to require the refineries to make more Premium, since it can be done obviously.
     
  16. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    This is the key to the whole discussion. Market pressures have converged to standardize on 87 octane. If higher were cheaper overall, we would see a trend in that direction, but we don't.

    Tom
     
  17. Apexr7

    Apexr7 New Member

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    Interesting...
     
  18. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Historically, high compression engines were used for increased performance. By the time fuel economy became more of a priority, it was ingrained in the public's consciousness that premium was for performance. Some still believe using premium in an low octane motor ups performance. Then it is reinforced in auto reviews that will hold premium recommended as a negative for economy and efficient cars, and ignore it with sports and luxury models. It is a mental hang up like being unable to see spending more per gallon might save money in the long run.

    As for CAFE, the EPA test blend used in every vehicle is 93 octane, or 91 for cars meeting 50 state emissions. If desired, a manufacturer can already take the premium fuel economy advantage, and only recommend 87 in the manual.

    The public's reaction is likely the biggest hurdle to premium being used for efficiency in a car. I was once guilty of it too.
     
  19. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    ...since we had this discussion, believe someone (Drinnovation) may have pointed out in another thread out that Chevy Cruze gets the good EPA mileage on Premium, but can run Regular. In that case perhaps Premium is greener.
     
  20. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    The 2.4L in the HHR is premium recommended. At least that is what the manual states. According to fueleconomy.gov it's a regular gasoline engine. People buying the turbo might not care about premium being on the window sticker, but nearly anyone looking for an economical car would balk at it.

    Those people that tried premium in their 2.4L reported better fuel economy.