QC
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2005
- Messages
- 22,783
Re: Gas additives?
Sickwilly,
If you refer to my post you will see a reference to Low Heat Value (LHV) and High Heat Value (HHV). Bruce edited the subsequent numbers to LHV, but the first lines represent HHV. LHV is more of a "net" energy number and typically used in engine discussions. You must do all calcs in one or the other or it doesn't make sense. So . . . . what I used was LHV from the Department of Energy:
Fuel, BTU/lb, BTU/gallon
Gasoline, 18676, 116090
#2 diesel, 18394, 129050
Ethanol, 11585, 76330
Propane, 19900, 84500
Methane, 20263, 19800
Hydrogen, 52217, N/A
1 US Gal Gasoline = 116,090 BTUs x .15 = 17,413
1 US Gal Ethanol = 76,330 BTUs x .85 = 64,880
64,880 + 17,413 = 82,293 BTUs in a US Gallon of E85 (85% Ethanol and 15% Gasoline) So when comparing cost and efficiency you need to use the energy equalized figures. The other method is to use a Gasoline Gallon Equivalent (GGE) which would be 1.41 Gallons of E85 to equal the energy of 1 US Gallon of Gasoline (116,090/82,293 = 1.41). So that means that at 2.19 per gallon of E85, the actual energy needed to match a GGE would cost $3.09. Refer to my post above for the break even cost on E85. Hope this helps.
Sickwilly,
If you refer to my post you will see a reference to Low Heat Value (LHV) and High Heat Value (HHV). Bruce edited the subsequent numbers to LHV, but the first lines represent HHV. LHV is more of a "net" energy number and typically used in engine discussions. You must do all calcs in one or the other or it doesn't make sense. So . . . . what I used was LHV from the Department of Energy:
Fuel, BTU/lb, BTU/gallon
Gasoline, 18676, 116090
#2 diesel, 18394, 129050
Ethanol, 11585, 76330
Propane, 19900, 84500
Methane, 20263, 19800
Hydrogen, 52217, N/A
1 US Gal Gasoline = 116,090 BTUs x .15 = 17,413
1 US Gal Ethanol = 76,330 BTUs x .85 = 64,880
64,880 + 17,413 = 82,293 BTUs in a US Gallon of E85 (85% Ethanol and 15% Gasoline) So when comparing cost and efficiency you need to use the energy equalized figures. The other method is to use a Gasoline Gallon Equivalent (GGE) which would be 1.41 Gallons of E85 to equal the energy of 1 US Gallon of Gasoline (116,090/82,293 = 1.41). So that means that at 2.19 per gallon of E85, the actual energy needed to match a GGE would cost $3.09. Refer to my post above for the break even cost on E85. Hope this helps.