Chemical compounds containing oxygen often used as fuel additives
In the liquid fuel industry, oxygenates are hydrocarbon -derived fuel additives containing at least one oxygen atom[ 1] to promote complete combustion .[ 2] Absent oxygenates, fuel combustion is usually incomplete , and the exhaust stream pollutes the air with carbon monoxide , soot particles, aromatic and polyaromatic hydrocarbons , and nitrated polyaromatic hydrocarbons.[ 3]
The most common oxygenates are either alcohols or ethers , but ketones and aldehydes are also included in this distinction.[ 4] Carboxylic acids and esters can be grouped with oxygenates in the simple definition that they contain at least one oxygen atom.[ 4] However, they are usually unwanted in oils, and therefore likely fuels, due to their environmental toxicity and tendency to cause catalyst poisoning and corrosion during oil production and refining.[ 5]
^ US EPA, OAR (7 August 2015). "Gasoline Winter Oxygenates" . www.epa.gov . Retrieved 17 March 2024 .
^ "Oxygenate". Merriam-Webster online . 2 March 2024. Retrieved 17 March 2024 .
^ Inal, Fikret; Senkan, Selim M. (2002). "Effects of oxygenate additives on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons(pahs) and soot formation". Combustion Science and Technology . 174 (9): 1–19. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.524.1105 . doi :10.1080/00102200290021353 . S2CID 56015797 .
^ a b Yeboah, Isaac; Feng, Xiang; Rout, Kumar R.; Chen, De (27 October 2021). "Versatile One-Pot Tandem Conversion of Biomass-Derived Light Oxygenates into High-Yield Jet Fuel Range Aromatics" . Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research . 60 (42): 15095–15105. doi :10.1021/acs.iecr.1c02994 . ISSN 0888-5885 .
^ Ni, Wei; Zhu, Gangtian; Liu, Fei; Li, Zhiyong; Xie, Can; Han, Yuanjia (19 August 2021). "Carboxylic Acids in Petroleum: Separation, Analysis, and Geochemical Significance" . Energy & Fuels . 35 (16): 12828–12844. doi :10.1021/acs.energyfuels.1c01518 . ISSN 0887-0624 .