US20100175314A1
2010-07-15
12/601,771
2008-05-30
The invention provides A blend of FT derived diesel, crude derived diesel, and CFPP improving additive, wherein the FT diesel is from 1 vol % to 50 vol % of the blend, said blend having a CFPP of below β18Β° C. The invention extends to use of FT diesel as a blendcomponent for a compression ignition fuel blend, said blend including the FT diesel, a crude derived diesel fuel and a CFPP improver additive, wherein the FT diesel is from 1 vol % to 50 vol % of the blend, which blend has a CFPP of below β20Β° C.
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C10G2/30 » CPC further
Production of liquid hydrocarbon mixtures of undefined composition from oxides of carbon from carbon monoxide with hydrogen
C10L1/08 » CPC further
Liquid carbonaceous fuels essentially based on blends of hydrocarbons for compression ignition
C10L1/143 » CPC further
Liquid carbonaceous fuels containing additives; Organic compounds mixtures of organic macromolecular compounds with organic non-macromolecular compounds
C10G2300/1022 » CPC further
Aspects relating to hydrocarbon processing covered by groups -; Feedstock materials Fischer-Tropsch products
C10G2300/1033 » CPC further
Aspects relating to hydrocarbon processing covered by groups -; Feedstock materials Oil well production fluids
C10G2300/30 » CPC further
Aspects relating to hydrocarbon processing covered by groups -; Characteristics of the feedstock or the products Physical properties of feedstocks or products
C10G2300/301 » CPC further
Aspects relating to hydrocarbon processing covered by groups -; Characteristics of the feedstock or the products; Physical properties of feedstocks or products Boiling range
C10G2300/80 » CPC further
Aspects relating to hydrocarbon processing covered by groups - Additives
C10G2400/04 » CPC further
Products obtained by processes covered by groups Β -Β Diesel oil
C10L1/1616 » CPC further
Liquid carbonaceous fuels containing additives; Organic compounds; Hydrocarbons fractions, e.g. lubricants, solvents, naphta, bitumen, tars, terpentine
C10L10/14 » CPC main
Use of additives to fuels or fires for particular purposes for improving low temperature properties
The invention relates to maintaining and/or improving cold flow properties of diesel fuels which include Fischer Tropsch (FT) derived fuel and a CFPP additive.
In cold climates the Cold Filter Plugging Point (CFPP) (EN116) of diesel fuels is very important and is specified in various standards such as the European diesel specification, EN590, where the climate related requirements vary from β20Β° C. CFPP for countries such as Germany to β10Β° C. and β5Β° C. respectively for countries such as Portugal and Greece. Countries such as Switzerland, Finland, Sweden, Norway and Denmark have adopted EN590 artic grade cold flow requirements with winter CFPP ranges being from β20Β° C. (Artic grade 0) to β32Β° C. (Arctic grade 2).
The cold flow behaviour of diesel fuels generally depends on their molecular structure. Fuels usually contain a mixture of hydrocarbons including n-paraffins, branched linear paraffins, olefins, aromatics and other non-polar and polar compounds. The straight chain hydrocarbons which have the lowest solubility in the fuel tend to separate as waxes at low temperatures below the cloud point of the fuel. The n-paraffins distribution of diesels is typically in the range of C9-C28 although the carbon chain length sometimes extends to the mid to upper thirties. As the chain length of the n-alkane molecule increases, its solubility in the fuel at low temperatures decreases and the rate of separation increases. Upon continuous lowering of temperature below the fuel cloud point, these waxes start to adhere together to form a network which eventually prevents the flow of the fuel as measured by the pour point test. Also the large wax platelets formed tend to block the diesel fuel filter and prevent the engine operation at temperatures below the fuel cloud point. This behaviour can be simulated using lab tests such as the cold filter plugging point (CFPP) test.
The addition of cold flow additives such as ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) based co-polymers, tend to enhance the cold flow characteristics of these fuels. These additives function by reducing the size and changing the shape of the wax crystals. They also reduce the tendency of the crystals to adhere together and form a gel. Flow improvers are most effective in fuels with a low concentration of widely distributed waxy n-paraffins, since crystal growth is slow in such fuels and flow improver molecules can effectively co-crystallize on slowly growing wax crystals.
As a fuel is cooled to its cloud point, the normal paraffins begin to separate from the fuel wax. Upon further cooling, more wax appears and adds to these initial crystals. These crystals rapidly grow to a size which prevents fuel flow. Flow improvers act to modify the wax as it forms in the following ways:
Nucleation: Additive composition is adjusted such that at the fuel cloud point many artificial nuclei become available on which wax crystals grow.
Growth arresting: During crystal growth around the nuclei, additive molecules also act to prevent further growth.
Both of these effects combine and result in the formation of many very small crystals rather than fewer larger crystals. These small crystals pass through the filters and/or form permeable cakes on the filter medium to allow continued operability until the fuel has warmed and the wax redissolves.
It is believed that, amongst other factors, the following factors affect a fuel's response to flow improver additive:
Narrow cut fuels, which are fractionated sharply, tend to be less responsive to flow improvers because they have a higher wax precipitation rate. It is generally agreed that flow improvers reduce filter plugging temperatures by co-crystallizing with n-paraffin molecules to inhibit wax crystal growth. This implies there is a balance between the rate of crystal growth and the rate of co-crystallization. If the rate of crystal growth is slow, the flow improver has a better chance of co-crystallization with the growing wax crystal and inhibits its growth. If the rate of crystal growth is rapid, large crystals form before the flow improvers can co-crystallize with them to hinder their growth. Fuels with a wide carbon distribution contain many different n-parrafinic molecules and it is believed that crystals from a mixture of n-paraffins grow at a slower rate than crystals formed from a single n-paraffin, because n-paraffins in mixtures do not line up side by side to form a new layer on the crystal. Since mixed n-paraffin crystals grow slowly, flow improvers have more time to interact with the growing crystals and inhibit their growth.
FT derived diesel consists of approximately 50% n-paraffins compared to an EN590 conventional diesel that contains less than 20% n-paraffins. Although FT derived diesel has a normal boiling range, comparable to that of EN590 diesels, the large total volume of n-paraffins may enhance crystal growth rate to the extent that it decrease the effectiveness of flow improvers compared to conventional diesels
It was thus expected that if FT derived diesel were blended with a crude oil derived diesel this would reduce the effectiveness of the CFPP additives on the blend.
Moreover, it was expected that a narrow cut FT derived diesel would reduce the effectiveness of the CFPP additives on the blend.
Surprisingly the inventors have solved the problem of the CFPP of FT derived diesel and crude oil derived diesel blends in the presence of CFPP additives.
According to a first aspect of the invention there is provided a FT derived diesel, crude derived diesel, and CFPP improving additive blend, wherein the FT diesel is from 1 vol % to 50 vol % of the blend, said blend having a CFPP of below β18Β° C.
Typically, the FT diesel is from 5 vol % to 40 vol % of the blend and the CFPP of the blend is below β20Β° C.
Typically, the FT diesel is from 5 vol % to 20 vol % of the blend and the CFPP of the blend is below β20Β° C.
The CFPP improving additive is usually from 50 ppm to 1000 ppm of the blend, typically 100 ppm to 1000 ppm, more typically from 250 ppm to 1000 ppm.
The FT diesel may have a >C19 wax content of less than 3.2 mass %, in some embodiments less than 2.4 mass %, even less than 1.8 mass %, typically 1.6 mass %.
The FT diesel may have a CFPP of β5Β° C. to β18Β° C., typically β10Β° C. to β18Β° C.
The FT diesel may have a CFPP of β18Β° C. with the following characteristics:
| β18Β° C. CFPP | |
| FT diesel | |
| CFPP (Β° C.) | β18 | |
| Cloud Point (Β° C.) | β17.4 | |
| Pour Point (Β° C.) | β21 | |
| Density @15Β° C. (kg/m3) | 767.8 | |
| Distillation (D86) | ||
| IBP (Β° C.) | 166 | |
| β5% (Β° C.) | 189 | |
| 10% (Β° C.) | 196 | |
| 20% (Β° C.) | 206 | |
| 30% (Β° C.) | 218 | |
| 40% (Β° C.) | 233 | |
| 50% (Β° C.) | 247 | |
| 60% (Β° C.) | 262 | |
| 70% (Β° C.) | 277 | |
| 80% (Β° C.) | 293 | |
| 90% (Β° C.) | 312 | |
| 95% (Β° C.) | 326 | |
| FBP (Β° C.) | 334 | |
| FBP β90% | 22 | |
| 90%-20% | 106 | |
The FT diesel may have a T90-T20 of 120Β° C. to 105Β° C.
The FT diesel may be defined as a winter diesel conforming to a CFPP of less than β10Β° C.
The crude derived diesel may have a CFPP of β5Β° C. to β15Β°, typically β10Β° C. to β15Β° C.
The crude derived diesel may have a T90-T20 of 60Β° C. to 130Β° C.
The crude derived diesel may have FBP-T90 of 23Β° C. to 35Β° C.
The crude-oil derived diesel can either be a narrow cut or a wide cut diesel
The invention extends to the use of FT diesel as a blend component for a compression ignition fuel blend, said blend including the FT diesel, a crude derived diesel fuel and a CFPP improver additive, wherein the FT diesel is from 1 vol % to 50 vol % of the blend, which blend has a CFPP of below β20Β° C.
Typically, the FT diesel is from 5 vol % to 40 vol % of the blend and the CFPP of the blend is below β20Β° C.
The CFPP of a blend including around 20 vol % FT diesel is typically less than β20Β° C. at
CFPP improver dosage rates less than 500ppm for narrow cut crude-oil derived diesel and less than β30Β° C. for wide cut crude-oil derived diesels at similar dosage rates.
The CFPP improving additive is usually from 50 ppm to 1000 ppm of the blend.
The invention will now be described, by way of non-limiting examples only.
The results showed that the diesel fuel composition resulted in a better than expected cold flow property response of the additive on the composition and thus of the composition.
In the experiment, FT diesel samples were evaluated to investigate the effect on cold flow improver performance when adding a winter grade FT diesel to wide and narrow EN590 diesels. Selected fuel properties of the base fuels are shown in Table 1 and Table 2. A FT diesel sample with a Cold Filter Plugging Point (CFPP) of β18Β° C. and another with a CFPP of β7Β° C. were tested with various CFPP improvers (additives). These results are shown in Table 3 to Table 6.
For this type of FT diesel, with a CFPP of β18Β° C. it has a paraffin content of 39.6 mass % and >C19 of 1.6 mass %, whereas one with a CFPP of β9Β° C. has a paraffin content of 41.4 mass % and >C19 of 3.4 mass %.
| TABLE 1 |
| FT diesel Characteristics |
| β18Β° C. CFPP | β7Β° C. CFPP | |
| FT diesel | FT diesel | |
| CFPP (Β° C.) | β18 | β7 | |
| Cloud Point (Β° C.) | β17.4 | β3.1 | |
| Pour Point (Β° C.) | β21 | β9 | |
| Density @15Β° C. (kg/m3) | 767.8 | 774.5 | |
| Distillation (D86) | |||
| IBP (Β° C.) | 166 | 184 | |
| β5% (Β° C.) | 189 | 205 | |
| 10% (Β° C.) | 196 | 212 | |
| 20% (Β° C.) | 206 | 224 | |
| 30% (Β° C.) | 218 | 237 | |
| 40% (Β° C.) | 233 | 252 | |
| 50% (Β° C.) | 247 | 267 | |
| 60% (Β° C.) | 262 | 284 | |
| 70% (Β° C.) | 277 | 301 | |
| 80% (Β° C.) | 293 | 319 | |
| 90% (Β° C.) | 312 | 341 | |
| 95% (Β° C.) | 326 | 356 | |
| FBP (Β° C.) | 334 | 364 | |
| FBP β90% | 22 | 23 | |
| 90%-20% | 106 | 117 | |
| TABLE 2 |
| Selected fuel properties of the crude-oil |
| derived samples used in example 1 |
| Fuel 1 | Fuel 2 | Fuel 3 | Fuel 4 | Fuel 5 | |
| German | Dutch | UK | French | Spanish | |
| Cloud Point | β7.6 | β7.1 | β7.2 | β9 | β5.3 |
| (Β° C.) | |||||
| Density @ 15Β° C. | 829.3 | 830.9 | 839.7 | 832 | 839.9 |
| (kg/m3) | |||||
| D86 (Β° C.) | |||||
| IBP | 213.4 | 180.8 | 183.7 | 162.5 | 168.5 |
| β5% | 209.6 | 197.9 | 205.2 | 186.8 | 192.8 |
| 10% | 221.5 | 210.7 | 219.5 | 199.2 | 196.7 |
| 20% | 231.7 | 224.7 | 238.3 | 215.8 | 210 |
| 30% | 241.8 | 237.5 | 253.1 | 232.9 | 223.2 |
| 40% | 252.9 | 250.5 | 265.4 | 248.2 | 239.1 |
| 50% | 264.4 | 263.4 | 277.3 | 261.7 | 255.8 |
| 60% | 275.3 | 276.2 | 287.5 | 274.2 | 272.7 |
| 70% | 286.7 | 291.3 | 300.1 | 287.8 | 291.1 |
| 80% | 299.5 | 307.9 | 312.6 | 303.9 | 312.1 |
| 90% | 317.9 | 331.6 | 329.4 | 324.5 | 337.4 |
| 95% | 335.9 | 349.0 | 342.7 | 344 | 356.5 |
| FBP | 352.6 | 362.5 | 351.7 | 354.9 | 367.1 |
| 90%-20% | 86.2 | 106.9 | 91.1 | 108.7 | 127.4 |
| FBP-90% | 34.7 | 30.9 | 22.3 | 30.4 | 29.7 |
Even though the effect of the winter FT diesel in a blend on the cold flow improver response is dependant on whether the base fuel is a narrow or wide cut crude derived diesel, several cold flow improvers, if not all of them, worked effectively in blends containing winter FT diesel with no significant deteriorating changes relative to the EN590 fuel containing no FT diesel.
At low concentrations of FT diesel, about less than 20 vol % FT , no negative effects on the cold flow improver additive response were observed.
| TABLE 3 |
| Winter (β18Β° C. CFPP) FT diesel blends with a |
| EN590 DIESEL at various dosage rates of additive A, B and C |
| FT - vol % |
| 0 | 5 | 10 | 15 | 20 | 40 |
| ppm | CFPP (Β° C.) |
| GERMAN |
| A |
| 0 | β12 | β13 | β13 | β13 | β14 | β16 |
| 200 | β18 | β18 | β19 | β19 | β18 | β20 |
| 300 | β20 | β20 | β21 | β22 | β21 | β22 |
| 400 | β22 | β23 | β22 | β22 | β21 | β22 |
| 500 | β24 | β25 | β26 | β24 | β23 | β27 |
| DUTCH |
| A |
| 0 | β10 | β10 | β9 | β11 | β12 | β14 |
| 200 | β24 | β22 | β21 | β20 | β22 | β25 |
| 300 | β22 | β24 | β23 | β27 | β30 | β30 |
| 500 | β24 | β27 | β26 | β29 | β27 | β29 |
| UK |
| B |
| 0 | β8 | β8 | β9.5 | β9.5 | β10 | β12 |
| 200 | β19 | β18 | β20 | β22 | β20 | β19 |
| 300 | β20 | β21 | β23 | β24 | β26 | β26 |
| 400 | β23 | β25 | β23 | β25 | β23 | β25 |
| 500 | β26 | β275 | β25 | β26 | β27 | β24 |
| French |
| B |
| 0 | β11 | β11 | β12 | β12 | β14 | β16 |
| 100 | β23 | β22 | β25 | β27 | β25 | β21 |
| 200 | β25 | β28 | β26 | β26 | β25 | β25 |
| 300 | β27 | β25 | β28 | β29 | β26 | β26 |
| 400 | β30 | β27 | β32 | β27 | β25 | β28 |
| 500 | β27 | β31 | β27 | β30 | β28 | β26 |
| Spanish |
| C |
| 0 | β8 | β7 | β8 | β9 | β9 | β12 |
| 100 | β20 | β21 | β22 | β22 | β22 | β25 |
| 200 | β23 | β27 | β26 | β27 | β23 | β27 |
| 300 | β22 | β29 | β29 | β29 | β31 | β28 |
| 400 | β27 | β31 | β30 | β30 | β30 | β29 |
| 500 | β25 | β31 | β31 | β32 | β31 | β32 |
| TABLE 4 |
| Winter FT diesel blends with a narrow cut |
| Scandinavian diesel at various dosage rates |
| of CFPP improving additive |
| β18Β° C. CFPP FT | β7Β° CFPP FT |
| FT - vol % |
| CFPP | 0 | 3 | 5 | CFPP | 0 | 3 | 5 |
| additive | CFPP (Β° C.) | additive | CFPP (Β° C.) |
| β0 ppm | β11 | β11 | β11 | β0 ppm | β11 | β11 | β9 |
| 200 ppm | β18 | β19 | β25 | 200 ppm | β18 | β19 | β21 |
| 300 ppm | β19 | β24 | β21 | 300 ppm | β19 | β19 | β23 |
| 400 ppm | β19 | β23 | β25 | 400 ppm | β19 | β25 | β25 |
FT diesel blends with Scandinavian diesel improved the CFPP response when compared to the base fuel at similar CFPP improver dosage rates.
| TABLE 5 |
| Winter FT diesel blends with a wide cut German |
| diesel including Fatty Acid Methyl ester, at various |
| dosage rates of CFPP additive |
| β18Β° C. CFPP FT | β7Β° CFPP FT |
| FT - vol % |
| CFPP | 0 | 5 | 10 | 0 | 5 | 10 |
| additive | CFPP (Β° C.) | CFPP additive | CFPP (Β° C.) |
| β0 ppm | β8 | β8 | β8 | β0 ppm | β8 | β7 | β6 |
| 150 ppm | β27 | β27 | β28 | 150 ppm | β27 | β26 | β26 |
A similar exercise was carried out with US 2-D diesel. It can be seen that although the β7Β° C. FT diesel resulted in a decrease in the CFPP of the US 2-D/FT blend, the US 2-D/FT blends remain highly treatable at 20 vol % FT content.
| TABLE 6 |
| HCP FT diesel blends with US 2-D at a dosage rate of |
| 500 ppm of additive A |
| US | 10 | 15 | 20 | 50 | ||
| 2D | vol % FT | vol % FT | vol % FT | vol % FT | FT | |
| Neat blends |
| CFPP | β14 | β13 | β11 | β12 | β8 | β7 |
| (Β° C.) | ||||||
| Cloud | β12.3 | β11.1 | β11.5 | β11.5 | β8.3 | β5.1 |
| point | ||||||
| (Β° C.) |
| Blends Additised with 500 ppm CFPP |
| improver additive |
| CFPP | β22 | β21 | β23 | β22 | β19 | β17 |
| (Β° C.) | ||||||
| Cloud | β10.8 | β10.8 | β10.8 | β10.7 | β8.2 | β |
| point | ||||||
| (Β° C.) | ||||||
1-13. (canceled)
14. A blend comprising a Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel, a crude derived diesel, and a cold filter plugging point improving additive, wherein the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel comprises from 1 vol. % to 50 vol. % of the blend, wherein the blend has a cold filter plugging point of below β18Β° C., and wherein the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel has a >C19 wax content of less than 3.2 mass %.
15. The blend of claim 14, wherein the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel has a >C19 wax content of less than 1.6 mass %.
16. The blend of claim 14, wherein the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel comprises from 5 vol. % to 40 vol. % of the blend, and wherein the blend has a cold filter plugging point of below β20Β° C.
17. The blend of claim 16, wherein the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel comprises from 5 vol. % to 20 vol. % of the blend
18. The blend of claim 14, wherein the cold filter plugging point improving additive comprises from 50 ppm to 1000 ppm of the blend.
19. The blend of claim 14, wherein the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel has a cold filter plugging point of from β5Β° C. to β18Β° C.
20. The blend of claim 14, wherein the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel has a cold filter plugging point of β18Β° C., a cloud point of β17.4Β° C., a pour point of β21Β° C., a density at 15Β° C. of 767.8 kg/m3, and boiling point characteristics comprising:
| Initial Boiling Point (Β° C.) | 166Β° C. | |
| β5% (Β° C.) | 189Β° C. | |
| 10% (Β° C.) | 196Β° C. | |
| 20% (Β° C.) | 206Β° C. | |
| 30% (Β° C.) | 218Β° C. | |
| 40% (Β° C.) | 233Β° C. | |
| 50% (Β° C.) | 247Β° C. | |
| 60% (Β° C.) | 262Β° C. | |
| 70% (Β° C.) | 277Β° C. | |
| 80% (Β° C.) | 293Β° C. | |
| 90% (Β° C.) | 312Β° C. | |
| 95% (Β° C.) | 326Β° C. | |
| Final Boiling Point (Β° C.) | 334Β° C. | |
| Final Boiling Point β90% (Β° C.) | β22Β° C. | |
| 90%-20% (Β° C.) | 106Β° C. | |
21. The blend of claim 14, wherein the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel has a T90-T20 of from 120Β° C. to 105Β° C.
22. The blend of claim 14, wherein the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel is a winter diesel conforming to a cold filter plugging point of less than β10Β° C.
23. The blend of claim 14, wherein the crude derived diesel has a cold filter plugging point of from β5Β° C. to β15Β° C.
24. The blend of claim 14, wherein the crude derived diesel has a T90-T20 of from 60Β° C. to 130Β° C.
25. The blend of claim 14, wherein the crude derived diesel has an FBP-T90 of from 23Β° C. to 35Β° C.
26. The blend of claim 14, wherein the cold filter plugging point improver additive comprises from 50 ppm to 1000 ppm of the blend.
27. A compression ignition fuel blend component, the blend component comprising from 1 vol. % to 50 vol. % Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel, a narrow cut crude oil derived diesel fuel and a cold filter plugging point improver additive, wherein the blend component has a cold filter plugging point of below β20Β° C. when the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel comprises about 20 vol. % of the blend component and the cold filter plugging point improver additive comprises less than 500 ppm of the blend component.
28. The compression ignition fuel blend component of claim 27, wherein the blend component comprises from 5 vol. % to 40 vol. % Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel
29. The compression ignition fuel blend component of claim 27, wherein the cold filter plugging point improver additive comprises from 50 ppm to 1000 ppm of the blend component.
30. A compression ignition fuel blend component, the blend component comprising from 1 vol. % to 50 vol. % Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel, a wide cut crude oil derived diesel fuel and a cold filter plugging point improver additive, wherein the blend component has a cold filter plugging point of below β30Β° C. when the Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel comprises about 20 vol. % of the blend component and the cold filter plugging point improver additive comprises less than 500 ppm of the blend component.
31. The compression ignition fuel blend component of claim 30, wherein the blend component comprises from 5 vol. % to 40 vol. % Fischer-Tropsch derived diesel
32. The compression ignition fuel blend component of claim 30, wherein the cold filter plugging point improver additive comprises from 50 ppm to 1000 ppm of the blend component.