jmw
Industrial
- Jun 27, 2001
- 7,435
The production of HFO blending residues with distillates results in a significant number of viscosity errors reported; Lintech reports that over 7% of fuels sampled are off spec for viscosity.
The fuel blend calculation determines the required ratio of components to produce a blend with the desired properties.
Most properties are additive e.g. density, %mass sulphur, sodium vanadium etc.
Viscosity is not, it has a logarythmic relationship between the ratio and the viscosities of the components.
If the ratio of the components and the viscosity of the components are accurately known, how well should the calculated viscosity compare with the measured viscosity?
Or, is the variation in viscosity a function of its sensitivity to small errors in ratio (that are not significant when applied to additive properties), or small errors in the viscosity of the components or is it because the model for predicting the viscosity is imperfect?
JMW
The fuel blend calculation determines the required ratio of components to produce a blend with the desired properties.
Most properties are additive e.g. density, %mass sulphur, sodium vanadium etc.
Viscosity is not, it has a logarythmic relationship between the ratio and the viscosities of the components.
If the ratio of the components and the viscosity of the components are accurately known, how well should the calculated viscosity compare with the measured viscosity?
Or, is the variation in viscosity a function of its sensitivity to small errors in ratio (that are not significant when applied to additive properties), or small errors in the viscosity of the components or is it because the model for predicting the viscosity is imperfect?
JMW