New Insights in Polymer-Biofuels Interaction

This paper deals with polymer-fuel interaction focusing on specific effects of biofuels on polyethylene (PE) in automotive applications. The practical objective is to develop a predictable approach for durability of polyethylene tanks in contact of ethanol based or biofuel based fuels. In the case o...

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Main Authors: Richaud Emmanuel, Djouani Fatma, Fayolle Bruno, Verdu Jacques, Flaconneche Bruno
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2015-02-01
Series:Oil & Gas Science and Technology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.2516/ogst/2013151
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spelling doaj-1b86df0b748a4f7c8200d3f26b74d52b2021-02-02T05:00:06ZengEDP SciencesOil & Gas Science and Technology1294-44751953-81892015-02-0170231733310.2516/ogst/2013151ogst120301New Insights in Polymer-Biofuels InteractionRichaud EmmanuelDjouani FatmaFayolle BrunoVerdu JacquesFlaconneche BrunoThis paper deals with polymer-fuel interaction focusing on specific effects of biofuels on polyethylene (PE) in automotive applications. The practical objective is to develop a predictable approach for durability of polyethylene tanks in contact of ethanol based or biofuel based fuels. In the case of ethanol, the main consequence on PE durability is a reduction of the rate of stabilizer extraction; this latter phenomenon can be modeled by first order kinetics with a rate constant that obeys the Arrhenius equation. Concerning biodiesels, the study was focused on soy and rapeseed methyl ester which were compared to methyl oleate and methyl linoleate used as model compounds. Here, PE-fuel interactions can be described as well as physical interaction, linked to the oil penetration into the polymer, as chemical interaction linked to an eventual co-oxidation of PE and oil. Both aspects were investigated. Concerning biofuel transport in PE, it appeared that the oil diffusivity depends only of temperature and oil molar mass. Some aspects of the temperature dependence of the oil solubility in PE are discussed. About chemical interaction between oil and PE, it was put in evidence that unsaturated fatty esters promote and accelerate PE oxidation. A co-oxidation kinetic model was proposed to describe this process.http://dx.doi.org/10.2516/ogst/2013151
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Richaud Emmanuel
Djouani Fatma
Fayolle Bruno
Verdu Jacques
Flaconneche Bruno
spellingShingle Richaud Emmanuel
Djouani Fatma
Fayolle Bruno
Verdu Jacques
Flaconneche Bruno
New Insights in Polymer-Biofuels Interaction
Oil & Gas Science and Technology
author_facet Richaud Emmanuel
Djouani Fatma
Fayolle Bruno
Verdu Jacques
Flaconneche Bruno
author_sort Richaud Emmanuel
title New Insights in Polymer-Biofuels Interaction
title_short New Insights in Polymer-Biofuels Interaction
title_full New Insights in Polymer-Biofuels Interaction
title_fullStr New Insights in Polymer-Biofuels Interaction
title_full_unstemmed New Insights in Polymer-Biofuels Interaction
title_sort new insights in polymer-biofuels interaction
publisher EDP Sciences
series Oil & Gas Science and Technology
issn 1294-4475
1953-8189
publishDate 2015-02-01
description This paper deals with polymer-fuel interaction focusing on specific effects of biofuels on polyethylene (PE) in automotive applications. The practical objective is to develop a predictable approach for durability of polyethylene tanks in contact of ethanol based or biofuel based fuels. In the case of ethanol, the main consequence on PE durability is a reduction of the rate of stabilizer extraction; this latter phenomenon can be modeled by first order kinetics with a rate constant that obeys the Arrhenius equation. Concerning biodiesels, the study was focused on soy and rapeseed methyl ester which were compared to methyl oleate and methyl linoleate used as model compounds. Here, PE-fuel interactions can be described as well as physical interaction, linked to the oil penetration into the polymer, as chemical interaction linked to an eventual co-oxidation of PE and oil. Both aspects were investigated. Concerning biofuel transport in PE, it appeared that the oil diffusivity depends only of temperature and oil molar mass. Some aspects of the temperature dependence of the oil solubility in PE are discussed. About chemical interaction between oil and PE, it was put in evidence that unsaturated fatty esters promote and accelerate PE oxidation. A co-oxidation kinetic model was proposed to describe this process.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.2516/ogst/2013151
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AT djouanifatma newinsightsinpolymerbiofuelsinteraction
AT fayollebruno newinsightsinpolymerbiofuelsinteraction
AT verdujacques newinsightsinpolymerbiofuelsinteraction
AT flaconnechebruno newinsightsinpolymerbiofuelsinteraction
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