Latest Information
of Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel
December 2007
The Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel (ULSD or S-15) fuel story continues
to unfold and there is not much good news to be told.
ULSD is causing more and more problems in the field, with
little explanation and no help from the major refiners.
Burying our heads in the sand will not solve any of these
problems. They will not go away on their own, and unless
forced by customers or legislation the major refiners are
very unlikely to make any changes.
Some ULSD basics:
ULSD is hygroscopic, it actually holds more dissolved or
suspended water (up to 2X as much) than Low Sulfur Diesel
(Non-Road, Locomotive, Marine (NRLM), LSD, or S-500) or High
Sulfur Diesel (HSD or S-5000).
This dissolved water causes several problems.
It causes higher levels of gum formation, varnish formation,
and carbon deposit formation.
This water will corrode (rust) fuel tanks, pumps, injectors,
and any other metal it touches. We have seen dozens of examples
of engines stored for a few weeks to few months that have
significant corrosion in the injectors and other fuel system
components even though they are immersed in fuel.
Dissolved water encourages and increases oxidation, speeding
the breakdown (destabilization) of the fuel. We are seeing
fuel destabilize due to oxidative and thermal breakdown much
quicker than ever before. This destabilization takes many
forms including darkening of the fuel and formation of asphaltene
droplets which blacken and plug filter in a few hundred to
a few thousand miles.
Dissolved water is affected by the temperature of the fuel.
ULSD at 30°F can only hold approximately 35% of the water
it can at 75°F. As fuel cools it loses its ability to
hold dissolved water. The water is actually pushed out of
the fuel into tiny droplets. These droplets explain why you
can look at fuel in a tank and see no water and yet a fuel
separator or filter can constantly be accumulating water.
Furthermore at temperatures below 32°F those water droplets
turn to ice crystals. These ice crystals will quickly plug
a fuel filter with a white ice that looks remarkably like
wax to the uninformed. We regularly hear from people who
believe their fuel is gelling at temperatures of 32°F
or just below it. This icing was a major problem last winter
and is already causing problems this season. To add to the
problems caused by this high water content, bacteria and
fungi can and do actually grow in fuels with little or no
visible free water in the tank.
The size and shape of the paraffin wax seed crystals have
changed dramatically in ULSD as compared to previous fuels.
In ULSD these crystals are larger and regularly shaped than
in the LSD and HSD fuels. These larger crystals cause a series
of problems for users of ULSD.
First ULSD will “gel” several degrees sooner
(warmer) than the previous fuels. The larger crystals are
harder to “treat” to prevent gelling.
Next, there is a new cold weather operability problem that
was previously unknown and until recently undefined. This
is “Wax Dropout”, an occurrence that happens
when ULSD is subjected to a “Cold Soak” period
of approximately 48 to 72 hours. When the fuel is continuously
at or below a given temperature for an extended period of
time (Cold Soak); the larger heavier wax crystals agglomerate
and drop to the bottom of the storage container. This paraffin
wax has the further problem that it is not readily reabsorbed
by the fuel as the temperature rises.
On Monday February 5th of 2007 in the Northeast we had had
a weekend where the temperature dropped to approximately
8°F and stayed there all weekend. On that Monday morning
after approximately 72 hours of 8°F or colder we saw
a massive region-wide problem with WDO. We have now tested
for and seen this problem happen at temperatures between
12°F and 0°F.
The temperature where this WDO phenomenon occurs does not
appear to directly correlate to any of the commonly used
cold weather operability measures such as Cloud Point (CP),
Cold Filter Plug Point (CFPP), Low Temperature Flow Test
(LTFT), and Pour Point (PP) traditionally used to discuss
and rate diesel fuels.
The traditional method for improving cold weather operability
for diesel and heating fuels was to blend with Kerosene (#1
Fuel) or Jet A. Depending on ambient temperature, cost, and
availability, blends of 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, and even
higher have been used to lower the CP, CFPP, PP of fuels.
Due to a combination of factors including EPA regulations,
Catalytic Cracking, and Severe Hydrotreating ULSD has a lower
aromatic content and less solvency. The EPA regulations requiring
the fuel to be delivered to the vehicle with a Sulfur content
of 15 ppm or less have eliminated High Sulfur Kerosene and
Jet A as blending agents.
This situation has theoretically forced refiners to create
an ULSD #1 (Ultra-Low Sulfur Kerosene) for blending purposes.
There are however a number of significant problems with using
ULSD #1 for winter blending. For one thing, the major refiners
don’t want to produce this product. There are several
reasons including but not limited to; limited demand, the
need for segregated storage, the inability to use ULSD #1
for other uses, and high cost of production.
In short, the biggest problems are nobody wants to make
ULSD #1, nobody has any place to store it, it is much more
expensive than regular Kerosene, and last but not least,
it doesn’t work anywhere near as well as the old high
sulfur Kerosene.
The old industry “Rule of Thumb” for winter
blending HSD and LSD was that for every 10% Kerosene or Jet
A that you blended in you would improve (lower) the CP, CFPP,
and PP by 5°F.
An example would be if you had LSD with CFPP of 10°F
and you blended in 50% Kerosene you could expect to lower
the CFPP to approximately -15°F. This standard has been
used since before World War II.
Today using ULSD and ULSD #1 for blending the new “Rule
of Thumb” is that for every 10% ULSD #1 you blend into
ULSD you only improve CFPP by 2°F or less.
An example today would be starting with ULSD with CFPP of
10°F and you blended in 50% ULSD #1 you might lower
the CFPP to approximately 0°F. We say might because we
have seen a high number of instances where 10% ULSD #1 provides
a 1°F or less improvement.
In order to successfully operate using ULSD an Anti-Gel
product formulated to work with ULSD must be used. Many if
not most of the old-line anti-gel products that have been
on the market for 10, 20, even 30 years do not work effectively
on Catalytically Cracked fuels including ULSD.
To successfully treat ULSD requires new formulations that
include an Anti-Gel additive with “Seed Crystal Wax
Modifiers”, Cold Flow Improvers, Wax Anti-Settling
Agents, and Anti-Icing agents that have been modified to
work with this new fuel.
Well Worth Products offers a wide range
of products including Summit Fuel Treatment™ and Freeze
Flow™ products with chemistry formulated address
these and the many other problems found in today’s
fuels. They are designed to remove (Disperse) water, including
dissolved water; stabilize fuels, and provide extreme cold
weather operability (Anti-Gel) improvement for ULSD, LSD,
NRLM, HSD, IFO, and MFO.
© Copyright Well Worth Products – William Richards
12/2007
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