Abstract

Synthetic diesel fuel produced from natural gas via gas-to-liquid (GTL) technology is referred to as ultraclean fuel but is still challenged for full certification as diesel fuel. GTL diesel lacks certain hydrocarbons and chemical constituents, which although are benign to the environment, result in a trade-off in performance when used in a diesel engine. To boost GTL diesel physicochemical properties and thereby enable its use in conventional diesel engines, GTL diesel needs improvement. This can be achieved by mixing suitable additives to the GTL diesel and through the development of surrogate fuels that have fewer components. Screening of thousands of additives is a tedious task and can be done efficiently via computer based modeling to quickly and reliably identify a small number of promising candidates. These models are used to guide the formulation of five surrogates and predict their physicochemical properties. These surrogates are further verified using rigorous mathematical tools as well as throu...

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