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Gasoline

Gasoline has gone through many changes in the last couple of decades, both for efficiency and for environmental considerations. During the early 20th Century, the oil companies were producing gasoline as a simple distillate from petroleum, but the automotive engine was rapidly being improved and required a suitable fuel. Engines were modified to run on kerosene, however kerosene-fueled engines would “knock” and crack the cylinder head and pistons. This then led to the long search for antiknock agents, culminating in tetra ethyl lead. Typical mid-1920’s gasoline was 40-60 octane. The 1950s saw the start of the increase of the compression ratio, requiring higher octane fuels. Octane ratings, lead levels, and vapor pressure increased, whereas sulfur content decreased. Minor improvements were made to gasoline formulations to improve yields and octane until the 1970s – when unleaded fuels were introduced to protect the exhaust catalysts that were also being introduced for environmental reasons. From 1970 until 1990, gasoline was slowly changed as lead was phased out, lead levels plummeted, and octane initially decreased. With the passage of the US Clean Air Act of 1990, significant compositional changes in gasoline began to be forced on the industry to minimize this major pollution source, and these comprehensive changes are expected to continue well into the 21st Century.Oxygenates, which are actually pre-used hydrocarbons, have been sparingly used in gasoline since the 1970’s for their anti-knock value. Today they are increasingly added to gasoline because research seems to indicate that they help reduce the smog-forming tendencies of exhaust gases by reducing the reactivity of the emissions; therefore making the gases less environmentally harmful. Oxygenates can now replace high-octane aromatics in the fuel, thus dramatically reducing the CO and HC emissions (the “aromatic substitution effe...

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